Friday, July 19, 2024

load to stay afloat

 



Common ground: how galleries are sharing the load to stay afloat

In the first months of the Covid-19 pandemic galleries changed their tune. All of a sudden they were no longer competitors but “collaborators”, as collective initiatives sprang up. Some are staying the course—the Gallery Climate Coalition, helping art businesses tackle environmental issues, continues to incorporate new cities. Others, like South South Veza, for Global South dealers, have seemingly stopped operation. But underpinning each of these was an espoused desire for a better future that could only be achieved by working together.

More recently, a newer form of collaboration is emerging, but with an impetus that is easier to believe: money—or lack thereof. Two years into a cost-of-living-crisis, the crunch is on for many galleries, as spaces both established and emerging close every week. At June’s Liste art fair in Basel, six galleries shared stands, including Ginny on Frederick and Tara Downs. Ten will share booths at the next Art Basel Paris—a record number for any Art Basel fair.
“It’s a savvy way to mutualise efforts that show galleries’ creativity, collegiality, and resourcefulness,” says Clément Delépine, the fair’s director.

Overhead costs and the physical toll of doing fairs have promoted a new collaboration between two exciting young galleries, Silke Lindner in New York and Rose Easton in London, which this month are hosting group shows in each other’s locations. “It’s a nice, low-risk way to introduce our programmes to a different city without having to do a fair,” says Lindner. “It’s not just small galleries; everyone is more selective about fairs,” Easton says.

In a move that evokes the gallery swap initiative Condo, both dealers are staging their shows at the same time. Each gallerist is effectively overseeing a show hosted by their counterpart and costs of the exhibition and proceeds of sales will be split equally. It seems it’s not just collaboration but transparency that they seem to be vying for. “We all know the horror stories of galleries going under and owing money to their artists. There are now a lot of artists who are wary of galleries,” Easton says. “Our generation of galleries want to do things differently and not repeat past mistakes.”





China’s ‘Third Plenum’

 


July 19, 2024   |   Read Online

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IN TODAY’S EDITION
1️⃣ 6 top lines from China’s Third Plenum
2️⃣ Music tips from world leaders
3️⃣ Photo of the day

Hi Intriguer. Insiders are whispering that President Biden will drop out of the race this weekend. The word is he won’t endorse anyone, including Vice President Kamala Harris, because he believes an open Democratic National Convention in August will give his successor the legitimacy required to take on Donald Trump.

Now, I don’t know if this will actually happen, but I do know that if it happens it will be chaos. It’ll be real time, unscripted, high stakes political reality on international TV. It’s the kind of stuff to make West Wing fans weak at the knees.

You know who’d absolutely hate that? The Chinese Communist Party, whose idea of free choice is letting its members choose which pre-vetted superlative they’d like to use to describe Xi Jinping’s leadership.

But even though Chinese political meetings aren’t very exciting, they’re still super important, which is why in today’s top story, we’ll tell you everything you need to know (and nothing you don’t) about China’s Third Plenum meeting that’s been going on this week.

THE HEADLINES

 

Someone’s getting fired.
A major IT outage has disrupted airlines, banks, health services, and media outlets across the US, Europe, New Zealand, Australia and beyond. While investigations are still ongoing, early reports have traced the problem back to cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike, which recently issued a software update that appears to have caused problems for Microsoft Windows globally.

Houthis strike Tel Aviv with drone.
Yemen’s Houthis have claimed responsibility for a deadly drone strike on Tel Aviv, vowing to continue targeting Israel in solidarity with Gaza. The attack, which left one dead and 10 injured, now raises the prospect of further regional escalation. The explosive-laden drone was apparently spotted but not shot down by Israeli air defences due to human error.

Bangladesh protests spiral.
Protesters have attacked the Bangladeshi state broadcaster building, setting fire to the reception and vehicles parked outside. At least 39 people have now been killed in violent protests around a jobs quota favouring the children of war veterans. PM Sheikh Hasin has ordered schools and universities to close, but things don’t seem to be calming down.

Ursula von der Leyen reconfirmed as EU Commission chief.
The EU Parliament has re-elected von der Leyen to another five-year term as Commission President with 401 votes (well above the 360 required). The major centrist factions mostly backed her, but it was ultimately the Greens who got von der Leyen over the line.

Trump officially accepts Republican nomination.
His 93-minute address was the longest nomination acceptance speech in US history. It recounted last weekend’s assassination attempt and initially sought a more unifying tone, before criticising the Biden Administration and the broader state of US affairs.

TOP STORY

 

The six top lines from China’s ‘Third Plenum’

It’s been a summit-packed week. Between America’s GOP program in Milwaukee, the Brits cosying up to Europe at Blenheim Palace, and Japan hosting 18 Pacific Islands in Tokyo, China’s own Third Plenum almost took a backseat. Almost.

These closed-door plenums, chaired each year by President Xi, are the Super Bowl for anyone keen to figure out what China’s Communist Party leaders have in store.

And after months of unexplained delays, grim economic updates, and high-profile purges, anticipation was riding higher than 1980s jeans.

That’s because some prior plenums have made big headlines, like:

  • The 1978 gathering that opened China up to foreign business, and

  • The 1993 confab that semi-liberalised the yuan.

This latest one finally kicked off on Monday and wrapped with a communique yesterday (Thursday) - the Party will release a more detailed ‘decision’ in coming days but, for now, this text is characteristically lofty and tantalisingly vague.

So here are the plenum communique’s six most intriguing lines:

  1. We must remain firmly committed to accomplishing the goals

In other words, Xi is sticking with his 5% growth target, notwithstanding the headwinds. It’s unclear how he’ll hit it: the text’s emphasis on “quality” growth offers little hope for those wanting quantity (stimulus), though officials may eventually feel pressure to hit the accelerator to avoid a missed target.

  1. Ensuring and enhancing the people's wellbeing… is one of the major tasks of Chinese modernisation

This section goes on to hint at more support for families and the elderly, which could nudge household consumption up. There are also clues that Xi could loosen China’s ‘hukou’ restrictions on rural households moving to cities, bringing more demand for an ailing real estate sector. But these hints seem modest.

  1. "We must better leverage the role of the market

This is really Xi saying he wants to better use the market for state aims, rather than unshackle the market from the state. And the text makes clear his aims still revolve around security, including reducing China’s dependence on Western tech.

  1. We must make concerted efforts to cut carbon emissions

This is part of a broader low-carbon paragraph with poetic references to “lucid waters and lush mountains”. The key thing to note here is it’s probably China’s biggest - and most direct - plenum reference to carbon emissions yet.

  1. "In the face of a grave and complex international environment and the arduous tasks of advancing reform"

The thing about this dash of context is that most of us would nod along. While framed carefully to avoid blame, it still reflects an appreciation of China’s reality - and that’s interesting because Western officials often ponder the extent to which China’s officials are game to feed that reality up to the party leaders.

  1. Comrade Qin Gang's resignation should be accepted

Remember Mr Qin? He was the foreign minister mysteriously fired last year after just 206 days in the job (that’s 19 Scaramuccis for those playing at home). The fact he’s still mentioned as a “comrade” suggests his sin wasn’t too spicy (the rumour remains that he had an affair and fathered a child with a news anchor).

But Qin was just one of several senior officials booted over the past year, along with the defence, finance, science and agriculture ministers, hence this plenum’s exhortation to “faithfully” follow the party’s decisions.

And for a man with a massive reform to-do list, plus an ambitious deadline (the text says 2029), Xi doesn’t seem to have much faith in his team.

INTRIGUE’S TAKE

So in the big picture, this plenum offered little that’s new. But for an opaque system like China’s, a lack of new information can itself be new information. That’s partly why many China-linked stocks dipped once the plenum closed.

Specifically, by offering little new detail, this plenum has sent another signal that President Xi is doubling down on his same vision for a more state-led, more tech-sovereign, and more security-focused China.

And for now, that signal is giving investors little reason to keep investing.

Also worth noting:

  • Some China-watchers were looking for signs President Xi is okay. Why? Social media was abuzz with unfounded rumours he’d had a stroke, but footage showed him handling his duties normally.

  • The plenum’s more detailed ‘decision’ is due out in the coming days. Thereafter, the communist party’s Politburo meets later this month, and may (or may not) offer more insights into Xi’s thinking.

 
 

International Intrigue