'This is because of the Basel collector and the Basel effect,' says Charlotte Ketabi-Lebard, founder and director of Ketabi Bourdet, as well as the instigator of Basel’s new design fair, MAZE Design Basel. Installation had run smoothly enough and expectations were varied inside the Offene Kirche Elisabethen, a Swiss Gothic Revival church in central Basel, as the idea for the fair had come together quickly, and exhibitors weren’t sure if the people who’d come for Art Basel knew this was happening – or if the big-time collectors were even coming to the city this year.
The highlights from MAZE Design Basel
Design Miami cancelled its Basel edition only four months ago. While no official reason has been given by the fair, it boils down to the fact not enough good galleries were applying to show: Some didn’t because of the astronomical booth fees (around six figures), but others stayed away because they didn’t want to associate with those they deemed of lesser quality, whom Design Miami was letting in.
But organising a fair is not Ketabi-Bourdet’s usual day job. Just before she went to see the MAZE Gstaad art fair, Galerie kreo director Didier Krzentowski – who was already there – suggested she meet with MAZE founder Thomas Hug, and see if he’d help with logistics. Not only was he eager, Hug agreed to let dealers have final approval, and to have the inaugural edition’s participants only pay the cost to put the fair on – around €15,000 each; MAZE would make its money through bringing in sponsors.
Ketabi-Bourdet brought a Philippe Starck table made for New York’s Royalton hotel, a Garouste & Bonetti chair (with its original silk upholstery) made for French clothing designers Marithé and François Giraud’s New York brownstone, and a Bull Kitchen chair by Tom Dixon – which was sold to a Middle Eastern collection.
While Galerie Mitterrand is more known as an art gallery, Art Basel isn’t open to having designers like Lalanne being shown within its event space, so taking part in MAZE made more sense: It brought a whole flock of Lalanne sheep – some fluffy, some not – and a Roberto Matta bronze throne.
'There are lots of our artists who do design,' Carvalho says. Salon 94 also followed this, bringing a booth full of Urs Fischer objects, from chairs to a tea set to a lamp he patinaed himself (he’ll patina all of them). The gallery didn’t even get to presell any as works weren’t finished until the day before the fair’s opening, yet numerous editions of every piece had sold. 'I was surprised that we sold so much,' says Salon 94 director-at-large Fabienne Stephan.
Collectors came from the usual European suspects – France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, the UK – and even Czechia. But the pleasant surprise were the Americans (whose presence wasn’t a guarantee this year). 'All of us know the collectors,' Krztentowski says, 'they had to spend half an hour in each booth; they couldn’t escape.' Some collectors said they spent the longest they had in Basel there, taking hours to get through the 11 exhibitors. 'In no art fair have I ever seen as many extreme high-quality collectors – super, super, mega blue-chip – in one space' Ketabi-Lebard says.