Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea by Sam Gilliam

Art Basel Miami Beach

Upcoming
Dec 5 – Dec 7, 2025
Miami Beach
 
ART FAIR DETAILS

Art Basel Miami Beach
Miami Beach Convention Center
Booth F9
Dec 5 – 7, 2025

PRESS

Press Release

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Above: Sam Gilliam, Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea, 2020 © Sam Gilliam / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Pace is pleased to announce its booth highlights for Art Basel Miami Beach 2025.

As a conclusion to its 65th anniversary year celebration, Pace will feature marquee works by legacy artists Alexander Calder, Sam Gilliam, Robert Indiana, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, Kenneth Noland, and Richard Pousette-Dart at this year’s edition of Art Basel Miami Beach

The presentation will bring together works by Pace’s contemporary artists with current and forthcoming exhibitions at its galleries around the world, including Gideon Appah, Loie Hollowell, Friedrich Kunath, Robert Nava, Lauren Quin, and Mika Tajima

The booth will also highlight a new painting by Miami-based artist Alejandro Piñeiro Bello; a new gilded bronze installation by Elmgreen & Dragset; a 1979 sculpture by Lynda Benglis; a 1959 painting by Wifredo Lam; and two drawings by David Byrne, who is performing at the Fillmore Miami Beach on December 5 and 6

As part of Art Basel’s new Zero 10 sector, Pace will show two radiant installations by James Turrell, a key figure in the Light and Space movement.

Historical highlights on Pace’s booth include:

A late-career painting created in 2002 by Agnes Martin, who is the subject of the final exhibition organized as part of the gallery’s 65th anniversary, on view in New York through December 20

A 1963 hanging mobile by Alexander Calder, whose dedicated museum Calder Gardens is now open in Philadelphia—and one of his most iconic works, Cirque Calder (1926–31), is on view at the Whitney Museum in New York through March 9, 2026

Robert Indiana’s Ms America (2001), one of his 15 paintings depicting Marilyn Monroe—next year, 2026, will mark the centennial of the legendary American actress’ birth

Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea (2020), a large-scale canvas by Sam Gilliam— a solo presentation of the artist’s work is on view at the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin through January 25, 2026, and Pace will present an exhibition of his paintings in New York in spring 2026

A mesmeric late-career painting, Ellipse of Grass and Sky (1992), by Richard Pousette-Dart, whose Ellipse paintings will be showcased in an exhibition of his work opening at Pace in New York in January 2026

Kiki Kogelnik’s 1974 painting Tipsy Lady—her work is also included in the Whitney Museum in New York’s presentation Sixties Surreal, on view through January 19, 2026

A welded steel sculpture by Louise Nevelson, who is the subject of a major retrospective opening at the Centre Pompidou-Metz on January 24, 2026

A 1987 gold anodized aluminum sculpture by Donald Judd

Octave (1976), a shaped canvas by Kenneth Noland, who was instrumental in forging the language of postwar abstraction in the U.S.

La Veille (1959), a painting by Wifredo Lam, who is the subject of an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York through April 11, 2026

Contemporary highlights on the booth include:

Gideon Appah’s new painting House with an Empty Pool (2025)—the artist will open a solo exhibition at Pace’s New York gallery in January 2026

A 2025 painting by Loie Hollowell, who will have a solo presentation at Pace’s London gallery in spring 2026

A new painting by Friedrich Kunath, whose solo exhibition Aimless Love continues at Pace in New York through December 20

Lightning Spirit Luna (2025), a new canvas by Robert Nava, who will open a solo show at Pace in Tokyo in early 2026

A new painting by Lauren Quin, whose debut solo show with Pace goes on view in Los Angeles in January 2026

An Art d'Ameublement painting by Mika Tajima, who will have solo presentation at Pace’s Los Angeles gallery in summer 2026

Fanfaronade (1979), a brass, plaster, gesso, oil, and goldleaf work by Lynda Benglis, who has been pushing the tradition of sculpture into new territories since the 1960s

A new painting by Mary Corse, who has explored phenomena of light, space, and perception in sublime and boundary-crossing abstractions for six decades

Sunshine (2025), a gilded bronze and lacquer installation by the duo Elmgreen & Dragset, which depicts a young boy wearing too-large high heels in front of a mirror

The Maple Tree (Summer), a 2011 painting by Sylvia Plimack Mangold, who has been painting the trees that surround her home and studio in Washingtonville, New York for more than four decades

Two drawings created in 2003 by David Byrne, who is performing at the Fillmore Miami Beach on December 5 and 6, during the run of the fair

Sol Descendiente (2025), a new painting by Miami-based artist Alejandro Piñeiro Bello, who evokes the natural landscapes and folkloric traditions of the Caribbean in his vibrant compositions

The complete list of artists featured on the booth follows below:

Peter Alexander; Gideon Appah; Lynda Benglis; David Byrne; Alexander Calder; Mary Corse; Jean Dubuffet; Elmgreen & Dragset; Pam Evelyn; Helen Frankenthaler; Sam Gilliam; David Hockney; Loie Hollowell; Robert Indiana; Donald Judd; Emily Kam Kngwarray; Kiki Kogelnik; Friedrich Kunath; Alicja Kwade; Wifredo Lam; Rita Letendre; Li Songsong; Robert Longo; Sylvia Plimack Mangold; Agnes Martin; Yoshitomo Nara; Robert Nava; Louise Nevelson; Kenneth Noland; Paulina Olowska; Marina Perez Simão; Alejandro Piñeiro Bello; Richard Pousette-Dart; Lauren Quin; Michal Rovner; Arlene Shechet; Kiki Smith; Mika Tajima; Hank Willis Thomas; James Turrell; Leo Villareal; and John Wesley.

 

Featured Works

Agnes Martin, Untitled #18, 2002, acrylic and graphite on canvas, 60" x 60" (152.4 cm x 152.4 cm) © Estate of Agnes Martin / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Agnes Martin

b. 1912, Macklin, Saskatchewan, Canada
d. 2004, Taos, New Mexico

Loie Hollowell, Cadmium red brain on mauve background above blue water, 2025, oil paint, acrylic medium, and high-density foam on linen over panel, 48" × 36" × 3-1/2" (121.9 cm × 91.4 cm × 8.9 cm)

Loie Hollowell

b. 1983, raised in Woodland, CA

Kenneth Noland, Octave, 1976, acrylic on canvas, 83" × 81" (210.8 cm × 205.7 cm) framed, 83-5/8" × 81-5/8" × 2" (212.4 cm × 207.3 cm × 5.1 cm)

Kenneth Noland

b. 1924, Asheville, North Carolina
d. 2010, Port Clyde, Maine

Sam Gilliam, Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea, 2020, acrylic on canvas, 72" × 96" × 3-3/4" (182.9 cm × 243.8 cm × 9.5 cm)

Sam Gilliam

b. 1933, Tupelo, Mississippi
d. 2022, Washington, D.C.

Lynda Benglis, Fanfaronade, 1979, brass, plaster, gesso, oil and goldleaf, 36" × 21" × 3-1/4" (91.4 cm × 53.3 cm × 8.3 cm)

Lynda Benglis

b. 1941, Lake Charles, Louisiana

Richard Pousette-Dart, Ellipse of Grass and Sky, 1992, acrylic on linen, 72" × 56" (182.9 cm × 142.2 cm)

Richard Pousette-Dart

b. 1916, Saint Paul, Minnesota
d. 1992, New York

Elmgreen & Dragset, Sunshine, 2025, gilded bronze and lacquer, dimensions variable

Elmgreen & Dragset

Michael Elmgreen | b. 1961, Copenhagen, Denmark
Ingar Dragset | b. 1969, Trondheim, Norway

Lauren Quin, Virga, 2025, oil on canvas, 92" × 72" (233.7 cm × 182.9 cm)

Lauren Quin

b. 1992, Los Angeles

Sylvia Plimack Mangold, The Maple Tree (Summer), 2011, oil on linen, 18" × 24" × 1-1/2" (45.7 cm × 61 cm × 3.8 cm)

Sylvia Plimack Mangold

b. 1938, New York

Gideon Appah, House with an Empty Pool, 2025, oil on canvas, 120 cm × 140 cm × 4 cm (47-1/4" × 55-1/8" × 1-9/16")

Gideon Appah

b. 1987, Accra, Ghana

Louise Nevelson, Maquette for Sky Landscape I, 1977-79, welded steel, 30-1/4 x 17-3/4 x 24-3/4"

Louise Nevelson

b. 1899, Kiev
d. 1988, New York

Donald Judd, Untitled, 1987, gold anodized aluminum, 5" × 40" × 8-1/2" (12.7 cm × 101.6 cm × 21.6 cm)

Donald Judd

b. 1928, Excelsior Springs, Missouri
d. 1994, New York

To inquire about any of the artists or works featured here, please email us at inquiries@pacegallery.com.