Details of the fourth edition of Independent 20th Century announced
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Details of the fourth edition of Independent 20th Century announced
Pablo Picasso, Nature Morte au Verre sous La Lampe, 1962. Courtesy of John Szoke Gallery and Independent.



NEW YORK, NY.- Independent 20th Century announced further details of the fair’s fourth edition, taking place in New York City this September 4th–7th, 2025. The accompanying online preview will be available from August 28th until September 12th.

The invitation-only fair, founded in 2022, champions artists and avant-garde movements between 1900 and 2000, and is held at Casa Cipriani at the landmark Battery Maritime Building, which was built in 1909 at the southern tip of Manhattan.

Independent 20th Century continues its mission to reframe the canon of 20th-century art by bringing together artists from diverse geographies, generations, movements, and styles. Under the leadership of Independent’s curatorial team, the 2025 edition features 30 nominated exhibitors, with solo, duo, and group presentations of works by approximately 40 artists.

This year’s program includes a range of significant solo presentations spotlighting both recognized and lesser-known figures, underscoring the fair’s commitment to discovery across a wide historical and cultural spectrum. Alongside a cluster of galleries showcasing sculpture and installation art from the 1980s to the present, the fair features several self-taught artists, distinctive voices from Latin America, and four pioneering women artists from the Arab world.

By amplifying artists who challenged conventional histories, Independent 20th Century offers a unique platform to engage deeply with the ever-evolving story of modern and contemporary art.

Significant Solo Presentations

Nahmad Contemporary (New York) and Skarstedt (New York, Paris, London) will bring together a curated selection of works by French artist Georges Rouault, a remarkable figure of 20th-century Modernism whose work resonates in this moment. A contemporary of Fauvism, Cubism, and Expressionism, Rouault never formally associated with any of these movements. Often considered a religious painter, he expressed the spiritual and moral dimensions of human experience through a unique visual language that recalls stained glass, with luminous colors defined by thick black outlines.

Galerie Lelong (New York, Paris) will devote a solo exhibition to Elda Cerrato, whose six-decade body of work affirms art as a conduit for inner and cosmic knowledge, resistance, and transformation. Born in Italy and then based between Buenos Aires and Caracas, Cerrato experienced multiple migrations in life as in art. The presentation will center on her abstract “cosmovision” paintings of the 1960s and the 1970s series Maps and Multitudes, which confronted the harsh political realities of Latin America at the time (pictured above).

A solo presentation by Galerie Gmurzynska (Zug, Zurich, New York) will focus on Dan Basen, a rediscovery from the 1960s New York avant-garde. Basen moved fluidly between Happenings, nouveau réalisme, Pop, assemblage, and experimental film, while maintaining close ties with the Beat poets and American Surrealists. Though often shown alongside Pop artists, Basen fiercely critiqued their commercial aesthetics, forging a singular path.

Hales (London, New York) will dedicate a solo exhibition to British artist Ken Kiff with a focus on his time as Associate Artist in Residence at the National Gallery in London. From 1991 to 1993, Kiff had a studio within the museum, with access to the collection day and night—an experience that had a profound impact on his practice. The presentation highlights this significant body of work and is anchored by an important large-scale painting, The National Gallery Triptych (1993).

Weinstein Gallery (San Francisco) will present works by Leonor Fini spanning five decades of visionary imagination. Although she exhibited alongside many prominent Surrealists, Fini refused to join the movement officially, rejecting the misogynist views of founder André Breton. Fiercely independent, she rooted her art in themes of mythology, metamorphosis, psychological drama, and feminine power, describing her paintings as an “unmasking” of a prophetic inner being.

Rosenberg & Co. (New York) will unite a rare selection of 1940s collages, constructions, and paintings by Gertrude Greene, a trailblazing yet underrecognized figure in American abstraction. Deeply influenced by the avant-garde movements she encountered in Paris in the late 1920s and early 1930s, Greene became a founding member of the American Abstract Artists group in New York (first initiated by Katherine Dreier) and worked tirelessly to support leftist artist organizations.

Addison Rowe Gallery (Santa Fe) will present a solo survey of American Modernist Raymond Jonson, whose dynamic abstract compositions sought to transcend physical reality and explore spiritual realms. A key figure in New Mexico, where he co-founded the Transcendental Painting Group in 1938, Jonson advanced an innovative airbrush technique evoking light as a spiritual essence.

Jupiter (New York, Miami) will mount a tribute to Joe Zucker, an influential figure of the New York art scene of the 1970s and 80s, recognized for his conceptually driven practice and relentless material experimentation. Defying categorization across six decades of sustained innovation, Zucker helped redefine American painting with an approach that merged materials, process, and content.

A solo presentation by Sea View (Los Angeles) features paintings by Bruce Richards from the 1980s and 1990s, a pivotal period in his work marked by his transition from California to New York, his marriage, and the AIDS crisis. Whether rooted in art history, personal experience, or world events, Richards’s dense iconography of objects raises timeless questions around the human condition.

Sculpture and Installation Art from the 1980s to the Present

Cristin Tierney Gallery (New York) will exhibit works by Judy Pfaff, whose influential practice over the past six decades has spanned painting, printmaking, sculpture, and installation. Pfaff balances meticulous planning with improvisational decision-making to create her exuberant, sprawling installations, described as “painting in space.” The presentation at Independent 20th Century anticipates her forthcoming solo exhibition at the gallery’s new Tribeca location this fall.

Galerie Brigitte Schenk (Cologne) will spotlight Little White Men, an immersive 1983 installation by pioneering conceptual artists Ilya and Emilia Kabakov. Blending fictional narratives with Soviet history and social critique, the Kabakovs invite viewers into richly imagined worlds that challenge both personal and political boundaries. In Little White Men, miniature ghost-like figures appear frozen in absurd or futile activity, evoking themes of alienation, invisibility, and the tension between personal agency and systemic control.

Pi Artworks (London, Istanbul) presents early sculptural works by Jyll Bradley, who emerged in late 1980s Britain as a contemporary of the Young British Artists (YBAs). Like many women artists, it is only in recent years that she has started to gain due recognition. From pioneering photographic lightbox installations to large-scale public art in fluorescent Plexiglas and LED, Bradley’s wide-ranging practice combines the formal vigor of Minimalism with ideas of identity, place, light, queerness, and community.

Tureen (Dallas) will present a focused selection of 1990s sculptures by Los Angeles-based artist Jacci Den Hartog, marking the first in-depth East Coast showing of these works in over two decades. Among a generation of post-minimalist artists, Den Hartog developed a distinctive fusion of art-historical references, ecological form, and visceral materiality. The works on view highlight her idiosyncratic use of materials—from poured resin to vividly painted plaster—and her early exploration of psychological terrains.

Tony Shafrazi | Gallery Without Walls will mark his first participation in an art fair in over 12 years at Independent 20th Century, with a dual presentation that bridges past influences with the present. In conversation with work by Brandon Deener that pays homage to Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s soup cans, Zadik Zadikian will debut his large-scale installation Made in USA. The work features 160 gold-on-plaster ingots stacked in a column formation, echoing Zadikian’s historic exhibition Gold Bricks held at Shafrazi’s short-lived gallery in Tehran in 1978. The show was disrupted by the advent of the Iranian Revolution, and the sculpture of gilded mud bricks was stolen, as it was thought to comprise real bars of bullion.

Self-Taught Artists

Jhaveri Contemporary (Mumbai) will present paintings from the 1980s and 1990s by Balraj Khanna, marking the first display of his work in New York in more than 50 years. Born in India, Khanna was among a postwar generation of young artists who migrated to London from across the Commonwealth. Entirely self-taught, he developed a kaleidoscopic style of abstraction in which shapes seem to float in vast expanses of color. The presentation follows Tate’s recent acquisition of three major paintings in memory of Khanna, who passed away in 2024.

Galeria Danielian (Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo) will spotlight Odoteres Ricardo de Ozias, who discovered painting later in life while working for the Brazilian state railway in rural Minas Gerais. Improvising with found materials, he channeled a profound connection to Afro-Brazilian traditions and culture into his color-saturated works, which explore themes of spirituality, social critique, and the tensions between progress and nature.

Jeremy Scholar (London) will feature vibrant landscapes by the Florida Highwaymen, a collective of African American artists who forged their own path amidst the racial segregation of the Jim Crow South. Almost all without formal training, they painted the lush scenery of the Sunshine State—palm-lined coasts, fiery sunsets, and stormy skies—using intuitive techniques rather than direct observation. By selling their work door-to-door and from their own car trunks, the Florida Highwaymen bypassed the exclusionary gallery system of the era.

Voices from Latin America

In addition to Elda Cerrato on view with Galerie Lelong (New York, Paris), Calvaresi (Buenos Aires) will showcase works by Luis Ouvrard, a largely self-taught Argentinian painter and sculptor who spent his life in the city of Rosario. The son of immigrants from the southwest of France, Ouvrard drew on both the flat plains of Argentina and visions of the French countryside to create his dreamlike scenes that merged real and imagined landscapes. COSMOCOSA (Buenos Aires) will spotlight Luis Frangella, a key figure in the East Village art scene of the 1980s. Trained in architecture in his native Buenos Aires, Frangella relocated in 1976 to New York and was active in avant-garde circles, gaining recognition for his expressive large-scale paintings and collaborations with peers such as David Wojnarowicz.

Modern Arab Women Artists

Salon 94 (New York) presents a dual exhibition of Dorothy Salhab Kazemi and Huguette Caland, whose work offers a rich dialogue between Lebanese heritage and European Modernism. The fluid, organic forms of Kazemi’s stoneware ceramics echo the curves and rhythms of the body, while Caland’s radiant, sinuous paintings blur figuration and abstraction in playful reflections on sensuality and personal identity. Richard Saltoun Gallery (London, Rome, New York) brings together Baya, the Algerian prodigy who rose to fame in postwar Paris, and Juliana Seraphim, a Palestinian-born artist who represented Lebanon in several international biennials during the 1960s. Both artists challenged dominant portrayals of women by placing the female gaze at the center of their work. Baya’s joyful, patterned compositions depict autonomous female figures in harmony with nature, while Seraphim explored memory, desire, and the subconscious through a poetic Surrealist lexicon of winged and masked women. Huguette Caland, Baya, and Juliana Seraphim were all recently featured in Arab Presences: Modern Art and Decolonisation: Paris 1908-1988 at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, a landmark survey exhibition reassessing the place of Arab artists within the wider history of the 20th-century avant-gardes.










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