
This year, his projects speak to what he describes as the future direction of the art world on a couple of different fronts. Scott’s own client history in Venice includes the British Pavilion in 2019, which showed artist Cathy Wilkes, as well as the Israeli Pavilion, and events for numerous foundations and artists including Mark Bradford who represented the US in 2017. They will show NFTs alongside IRL works, which is a pretty bold move.’ I’m also really intrigued by Cameroon’s Pavilion, which will not only be a debut for the country in Venice, but also, I think I’m right in saying, the Biennale’s first ever crypto Pavilion.

But Scott gives some pointers: ‘Personally, I am looking forward to seeing Simone Leigh’s presentation for the US Pavilion – she is an incredible artist and there is huge anticipation for this exhibition. So, what are going to be the hot shows and events to look out for? Given the enormity of what’s on, it can be difficult to pin-point specific projects, and also there are often surprise standouts that no one anticipated in advance. A giant phalanx of PR professionals from around the world who converge in Venice to ensure that their Pavilions and exhibitions garner the best reviews in global media outlets, the most likes on Instagram, and the best-attended events.’ ‘Lots and lots of media’, as Scott says, ‘as well as hundreds of exhibition openings, press conferences and, of course, events.’ Given that the whole spectacle is ultimately about public reaction and perception, the PR’s role in the week’s success is paramount, as Scott says with a smile: ‘Although of course we must credit the hundreds of artists and curators who make the actual exhibitions, really the whole thing is run by PRs. It is the gathering for the world’s most important artists, their galleries, museum directors, curators, collectors, often the odd film star or mega-DJ, and media. Some 80 countries stage exhibitions in national Pavilions, each vying for the coveted Golden Lion prize, alongside an enormous group exhibition featuring work by more than 200 artists and countless ‘collateral events’. The Venice Biennale is formally titled the ‘International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia’ but widely referred to with awe as the ‘Olympics of the Art World’. Right now, Scott is preparing for the Venice Biennale, which opens with its customary VIP invitation-only Vernissage week in late April, a year later than planned due to the pandemic. The client list speaks to a formidable reputation – of both the agency and its founder. He also worked with cultural leaders such as Simon de Pury, dubbed the ‘Mick Jagger of auctions’, and Pamela Joyner, the activist art patron and philanthropist with whom he rolled out a widely successful campaign to lobby for increased equity for Black artists in museum collections worldwide. Scott founded his PR agency 10 years ago with a mission to work with clients who drive the culture forward, be it major organisations such as Frieze, or fashion and retail brands at the intersection of art, like Selfridges and Louis Vuitton. This includes the pioneering American hotelier, Ian Schrager, before getting the ‘art bug’ and expanding into what he now refers to broadly as contemporary culture. Having cut his teeth in the late 1990s world of Cool Britannia as a PR executive for the then-legendary Met Bar, he went on to represent brands and operators in the worlds of design and hospitality. Scott is taking meetings before dinner at Toklas – the restaurant by Frieze cofounders Matthew Slotover and Amanda Sharp – which he helped launch that’s also on the same premises.Ī Founder member of Shoreditch House, Scott is something of an international communications secret agent: like all the world’s truly influential PRs, he is discreet and understated, while in fact wielding an extremely powerful black book of contacts, cultivating a prestigious client list and operating at the top of his profession. He’s just been to visit his client, Frieze, the global contemporary art publishing and events company that has an office in the building.

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In the eight-floor lounge of 180 House sits Richard Scott, founder and CEO of PR agency Scott & Co, sipping a green tea.
