PHOTOFAIRS NEW YORK 2023

Jacob Gils

PHOTOFAIRS New York 2023

September 8-10, 2023 – Javits Center

PHOTOFAIRS New York is a new contemporary art fair operating at the intersection of photography and new technologies. The Fair will present a state-of-the-art view of visual culture at The Javits Center in Manhattan, September 8-10, 2023.

The strong curatorial approach of PHOTOFAIRS New York will present an expansive view of the contemporary market centered around image making, digital media and innovative practices.

PHOTOFAIRS New York programming will connect collectors and visitors with international galleries and boundary-pushing artists to invite discourse and interaction.

For this Exciting fair, In The Gallery will present the work of Jacob Gils, Danish photographer.

Photofairs New York from September 7th to the 10th . 

Address : Javits Center – 429 11th Avenue, New York,

AIPAD

AIPAD NEW YORK

AIPAD NEW YORK 3-7 APRIL 2019

 

The Photography Show presented by AIPAD

In The Gallery has always been very focused on getting our art out there and showing it around the world. We love sharing our excitement with all the fine art photography enthusiasts that we get to meet, be that curators, collectors or other galleries. In this spirit we have a few artfairs coming up (and if you stay updated we might have a few more announcements soon!).

The Photography Show presented by AIPAD

Pier 94, New York City   3 – 7 April 2019

AIPAD

AIPAD

APRIL 2-5 2018

AIPAD New York

April 2018

ARTICLE MENTION BY ARTNEWS

A nice little blurb about our participation at Aipad 2018

www.artnews.com (click this link for full article)

Making its debut at AIPAD, Copenhagen’s In the Gallery brought with it the impressionistic work of Danish photographer Jacob Gils. For these pieces, Gils made a series of exposures from different vantage points, superimposing one picture on top of another until each work’s subject—a tree in one, a Santa Monica beach house in another—appears to dissolve. “I used to be a fashion photographer 15 years ago, and when I was shooting fashion everything was perfect: perfect models, the perfect places, [a lot of] Photoshop[ping],” Gils said. “So when I started to make my art, I wanted something that wasn’t perfect.” The gallery said that Gils’s photograph Santa Monica #1 (2017) had been put on reserve before the fair opened, but declined to give its price. A larger version was available for $48,000. Copenhagen #21, a smaller work, had sold before the fair opened for about $2,200.