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2008年1月11日 星期五

Art of making money: How does a dead fish sell for £12m and who's writing all the cheques?

By what alchemy does a dead fish sell for $12m? How can a discarded leather jacket be worth $690,000? And who's writing the cheques? Don Thompson spent a year trawling the murky waters of the contemporary art market to find out

DOUG KANTER/AFP/Getty Images

Damien Hirst's 'The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living' aka 'the shark'.

Friday, 11 January 2008

Green, wrinkled, and twelve million

One problem for the agent trying to sell the stuffed shark was the $12m asking price. Another was that it weighed just over two tons and was not going to be easy to carry home. The 15ft tiger shark "sculpture" was mounted in a giant glass vitrine and creatively named The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living. It had been caught in 1991 in Australia and prepared and mounted in England by technicians working under the direction of the artist Damien Hirst.

Another concern was that, while the shark was certainly a novel artistic concept, many in the art world were uncertain as to whether it qualified as art. The question was important because $12m represented more money than had ever been paid for a work by a living artist, other than Jasper Johns – more than for a Gerhard Richter, a Robert Rauschenberg or a Lucian Freud.

Why would anyone even consider paying this much money for the shark?

Part of the answer is that in the world of contemporary art, branding can substitute for critical judgement, and lots of branding was involved here. The seller was Charles Saatchi, an advertising magnate and art collector, who 14 years earlier had commissioned Hirst to produce the work for £50,000. At the time, that sum was considered so ridiculous that The Sun heralded the transaction with the headline: "50,000 For Fish Without Chips". But Hirst intended the figure to be an "outrageous" price, set as much for the publicity it would attract as for the monetary return.

The agent selling the shark was New York-based Larry Gagosian, the world's most famous art dealer. One buyer known to be pursuing the shark was Sir Nicholas Serota, the director of London's Tate galleries, who had a very constrained budget to work with. Four collectors with much greater financial means had shown moderate interest. The most promising was the American Steve Cohen, a very rich Connecticut hedge-fund executive.

Hirst, Saatchi, Gagosian, Tate, Serota and Cohen represented more art-world branding than is almost ever found in one place. Saatchi's ownership and display of the shark had become a symbol for newspaper writers of the shock art being produced by the group known as the Young British Artists, the YBAs. Put the branding and the publicity together and the shark must be art, and the price must not be unreasonable.

There was another concern, serious enough that, with any other purchase, it might have deterred buyers. The shark had deteriorated dramatically since it was first unveiled at Saatchi's private gallery in London in 1992. Because the techniques used to preserve it had been inadequate, the original had decomposed until its skin became heavily wrinkled and turned a pale green, a fin had fallen off, and the formaldehyde solution in the tank had turned murky.

The intended illusion had been of a tiger shark swimming towards the viewer through the white space of the gallery, hunting for dinner. The illusion now was described as entering Norman Bates's fruit cellar and finding Mother embalmed in her chair. Curators at the Saatchi Gallery tried adding bleach to the formaldehyde, but this only hastened the decay. In 1993, the curators gave up and had the shark skinned. The skin was then stretched over a weighted fibreglass mould. The shark was still greenish, still wrinkled.

Damien Hirst had not actually caught the now-decaying shark. He'd made "shark wanted" telephone calls to post offices on the Australian coast, which put up posters giving his London number. He'd paid £6,000 for the shark: £4,000 to catch it and £2,000 to pack it in ice and ship it to London.

There was now the question of whether Hirst could replace this rotting shark simply by purchasing and stuffing a new one. Many art historians would argue that if refurbished or replaced, the shark became a different artwork. If you overpainted a Renoir, it would not be the same work. But if the shark was a conceptual piece, would catching an equally fierce shark and replacing the original using the same name be acceptable? Dealer Larry Gagosian drew a weak analogy to American installation artist Dan Flavin, who works with fluorescent light tubes. If a tube on a Flavin sculpture burns out, you replace it.

Charles Saatchi, when asked if refurbishing the shark would rob it of its meaning as art, responded: "Completely." So what is more important – the original artwork or the artist's intention?

Nicholas Serota offered Gagosian $2m on behalf of Tate Modern, but it was turned down. Gagosian continued his sales calls. When alerted that Saatchi intended to sell soon, Cohen agreed to buy. Some journalists later expressed doubt as to whether the selling price for Physical Impossibility actually was $12m. Several New York media reported that the only other firm offer aside from that made by Tate Modern came from Cohen, and that the actual selling price was $8m. New York magazine reported $13m. But the $12m figure was the most widely cited, it produced extensive publicity, and the parties agreed not to discuss the amount.

Branded auctions

Half an hour before an evening auction at Christie's or Sotheby's, in London or New York, black limousines sit two deep by the kerb outside the auction house, engines idling like getaway cars in a modern Mafia movie. Many who arrive by car will not register for a paddle – a numbered object the bidder shows to register a bid. They are there because evening art auctions are a place to be seen.

Inside the auction house's entrance is a hall packed with high-profile dealers, rich collectors and their advisers. The space is full of "wish I could remember the name" celebrities, with lots of real or faked greeting and air-kissing.

Acquaintances smile and extend their arms and mouth: "What work are you here for?"

The protocol in the entry hall before an auction is to air-kiss, right cheek then left cheek; if male to male, shake hands, grasp just above the other's elbow with the free hand and respond: "It's good to see you looking so well," and "I'm here for the Rothko," (or whatever work is on the catalogue cover, or is most expensive – no one will enquire further). Nobody asks names; very often they are relieved to escape without admitting they do not remember.

At the front of the auction room is a large television screen that projects each bid simultaneously in pounds, US dollars, euros, Swiss francs, Hong Kong dollars and Japanese yen. In May 2007, Sotheby's added Russian roubles to the conversion. Every bidder is perfectly competent to calculate their bidding position in the auction currency; the conversion is there to remind everyone what an international event this is.

Christie's and Sotheby's contemporary sales take place on successive evenings, the auction houses alternating which goes first. This is nominally for the convenience of foreign bidders, since it doubles the number of works available on one visit to London or New York. There is also psychology involved. An uncertain bidder is doubly persuaded; two auction houses and two different sets of specialists say that contemporary art is desirable, prestigious and a good investment. The unsuccessful bidder at the first auction may be a more determined bidder at the second.In May 2007, the New York auction at Sotheby's came first, on a Tuesday evening, with sales of 65 works totalling $255m (including the premium paid to the auction house by purchasers). Forty-one of the works sold for over $1m each. The high point of the sale was Mark Rothko's painting White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose), which brought a world record price for the artist and for any post-war or contemporary work at auction. The Rothko was owned by David Rockefeller, the 91-year-old retired chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, chairman emeritus of the Museum of Modern Art, and a well-known philanthropist. He had owned the painting since 1960, when he'd purchased it for $8,500 from Eliza Bliss Parkinson, the niece of Lillie Bliss, one of the three founders of MoMA.

Sotheby's had needed a feature work for their spring 2007 New York contemporary auction and feared Christie's would jump in with a pre-emptive offer. Auctioneer Tobias Meyer, famous for offering huge guaranteed prices for art he thinks will be successful, was reported by The New York Times to have guaranteed Rockefeller a price of $46m, even if the painting sold for less.

To put Sotheby's guarantee price of $46m in perspective, it was twice the previous auction record for a Rothko – $22.4m, achieved at Christie's in 2005. Instead of listing an estimate for the work, the catalogue stated "Refer Department", which means "call us and we'll tell you what we think". The amount quoted to those who called Sotheby's started at $40m, and had crept up to $48m by the day of the auction.

On the assumption that Rockefeller's seller's commission was waived and that Sotheby's incurred $600,000 in promotion costs, the auction house could make a profit only if the painting sold for over $47m. Less, and it would lose money.

During the auction, Tobias Meyer introduced Lot 31, White Center, with the words "And now..." This was followed by a long pause. The audience chuckled. Meyer spelled out the painting's full title and moneyed history, "From the collection of David and Peggy Rockefeller" – a lengthy introduction virtually never heard in evening auctions, where lots are normally introduced only by their number and the artist's name. David Rockefeller observed the proceedings from a private box.

The opening bid was $28m, $6m above the auction record for a Rothko. Six bidders pursued it in $1m bidding increments. Two and a half minutes later, Meyer hammered down White Center for $72.8m. Who bought it? One dealer identified a bearded Russian collector in a box adjacent to that occupied by Rockefeller. Sotheby's said it was sold over the phone to a client of Roberta Louckx, a Russian-speaking auction house specialist – perhaps the same bearded gentleman. The painting produced a profit of just over $16m for Sotheby's, including their share of the amount achieved above the guarantee price.

Sotheby's specialists had high hopes that, driven by the price paid for the Rothko, the total of $255m attained at their New York spring contemporary sale would be higher than that achieved at Christie's the next day. It was not to be. Twenty-four hours later, having auctioned an Andy Warhol silkscreen for $71.7m and set auction records for 26 artists, Christie's totalled a record $385m in sales. This obliterated Sotheby's short-lived record, and brought the total for the two evening sales to $640m.

What sort of work was included in two auctions totalling almost two-thirds of a billion dollars? The Rothko is museum-class. A less traditional example was Jim Hodges' No-One Ever Leaves, a leather jacket tossed in a corner. The title reflects the meaning of the work. It sold for $690,000, more than double the artist's previous auction record, and almost certainly a world record for any leather jacket.

Among other offerings from branded artists was a Jeff Koons vacuum cleaner mounted in a Plexiglas case, with fluorescent tubes on either side. Titled New Hoover, Deluxe Shampoo Polisher, it sold for $2.16m. The auction catalogue entry described it as "addressing social class and gender roles as well as consumerism". Superior in artistic merit, and a wonderful example of contemporary portraiture, was Francis Bacon's Study from Innocent X. An unidentified buyer set an auction record for Bacon at $52.7m, double the previous record of $27.6m.

When thinking about the potential prices for the works offered at the two auctions, one should remember that the key part of the word contemporary is "temporary". Look at a listing of major galleries from a 10-year-old art magazine like Frieze, and you will note that half no longer exist. Inspect 10-year-old evening sale catalogues from Christie's or Sotheby's and you'll find that half the artists are no longer being offered in evening sales.

Ten years from now, will there be collectors around willing to pay even more for works like Jim Hodges' leather jacket? If not – and many people think "not" is the likely outcome – and if these are not decorative objects that you might want to display in your home, why is some of the individual work in the evening auctions worth so much?

Branded dealers

The branded art gallery is interesting. It is often designed to be a not-very-friendly place for those who are "just looking", and visitors are not comfortable. Part of the psychology of the contemporary gallery is its decor. It is often windowless, and composed of rooms with flat-white walls. This featureless environment is meant to reinforce the idea that what is being viewed is "art", and that galleries are elitist.

Another fear is that if you look somewhat affluent and interested, the dealer may follow you around, speaking a form of dealer-code where cutting-edge means radical, challenging means don't even try to understand it, and museum-quality means if you have to ask, you can't afford it. The dealer may tell you what you should like and why: "Isn't it great? You can see how talented this artist is." Or they volunteer: "Charles Saatchi liked this." Did he like it enough to take it home? Few collectors think they have the self-confidence to respond: "Actually, your artist does disturbing work and I, like Mr Saatchi, would never want that painting anywhere near me."

The psychological barrier is more common to the branded, superstar gallery. Mainstream galleries and others lower on the dealer pyramid tend to be less psychologically daunting. A fascinating part of my research was the chance to spend time with dealers in the very top echelon. Some – Tim Marlow of White Cube, or Harry Blain of Haunch of Venison – were fun to talk to, smart, customer-aware and marketing-savvy. Others, such as Larry Gagosian, are unquestionably great marketers, but had a whole lot less interest in spending time with a non-customer like me.

The world of dealers includes men and women of the highest integrity, many of whom are experts on the work of the artists they sell, on the same level as museum curators or university professors. Examples include Julian Agnew and Anthony d'Offay with the Camden Town Group; Zurich dealer Thomas Ammann and New York dealer Ron Feldman on the work of Andy Warhol; Otto and Jane Kallir on Egon Schiele; and Tim Marlow and Harry Blain, mentioned above.

Anyone can purchase a business licence and become a dealer. There is no required background, no test, no certification. Superstar art dealers achieve that status by coming to the table not with graduate business or art degrees, although some have them. Rather, they have lots of operating capital, sometimes good contacts, judgement in choosing marketable artists, aggression in approaching collectors, and savvy in promoting their brand. And they have charm, although charm takes many forms. In many cases, luck plays a role.

It is the branded dealer who manages the long-term career of a mature artist, placing work with collectors, taking it to art fairs, placing it with dealers in other countries, working with museums. These dealers are the gatekeepers who permit artists access to serious collectors. They represent the established artist whose work brings newsworthy prices at auction. Being with a branded dealer allows the artist to hang out with other artists at the top of the food chain. Artists are very status conscious. Until artists get such representation, they don't often get to hang out.

The branded dealer undertakes a range of marketing activities that include public relations, advertising, exhibitions and loans. Most marketing is not intended to produce immediate sales, but rather to build the dealer brand and obtain coverage for the artist in art publications. Marketing starts with public relations: private dinners to introduce customers and art critics to new artists; brunches and cocktail parties at the opening of shows. That dealers sell art is implied in these roles, but never openly. The higher the dealer's status, the less the gallery acts like a commercial enterprise, and the less it looks like a commercial space. The superstar branded dealer's space resembles a museum, and never displays prices.

For a hot artist, the dealer's waiting list for their work is never first come, first to purchase. Gagosian or White Cube do not sell a painting by a hot artist; they "place" it. They then circulate information on which museum or collector has demonstrated faith in the artist by acquiring. Both formal and informal agreements between dealers and artists allow the dealer to discount "where it is worthwhile to place the art in an important collection". Museums demand and get even larger discounts.

A new buyer with no track record at the dealer has little chance of being high on the list to purchase a hot artist. Actually, this new buyer has little chance of even seeing the hot paintings, which will be kept in a small private room. What is hung in public areas is available for purchase but of lesser significance.

Art fairs, the final frontier

Fairs such as Art Basel are industry trade shows where dealers come together for several days to offer specialised works. The work offered at the best contemporary fairs equals in quality and quantity that offered by auction houses in an entire selling season. In their ongoing battle against Christie's and Sotheby's branding, money and private dealing, art dealers needed a slingshot to combat Goliath. The weapon they found was not mergers or blockbuster gallery shows, but branded, heavily marketed art fairs. The start of the 21st century was also the beginning of the decade of the art fair.

Today, there are four international fairs whose branding is such that they add provenance and value to contemporary art. They are to art what Cannes is to movie festivals. One is TEFAF, the European Fine Art Foundation fair, held each March and known as "Maastricht". Another is Art Basel, which every June draws collectors, curators and dealers to the Swiss city. A third is the spin-off Art Basel Miami Beach, which is held each December and has achieved fame for its blend of art, money and fashion. A fourth, the most recent addition, is London's Frieze, held each October.

These attract consignments that might have gone to evening sales at Christie's or Sotheby's. They feature the superstar dealers who come because the best fairs draw the best collectors. The collectors visit because superstar dealers are showing. It is what economists call a virtuous circle or network effect; it leads to a self-perpetuating oligopoly among a few top fairs. Each of the four fairs attracts the same collection of dealers, art advisers, curators, museum directors and artists, along with the accompanying public relations people and journalists, all asking each other which artist and work is hot.

Fairs represent a culture change in art-buying. They replace quiet discussions held in the gallery with an experience akin to the shopping mall, blending art, fashion and parties in one place. Collectors become shoppers who acquire impulsively, usually purchasing only one work by an artist. They may never visit the gallery of the dealer from whom they buy at a fair. With each fair, collectors become more accustomed to purchasing art in a shopping-mall setting.

Fairs offer collectors a high level of comfort. Just as the presence of underbidders reassures an auction bidder that he is not bidding foolishly, the sheer number of people and "sold" stickers at a fair alleviates the collector's uncertainty.

The psychology at a fair is referred to as herding: when a buyer does not have sufficient information to make a reasoned decision, reassurance comes from mimicking the behaviour of the herd.

Dealers reap great publicity if they handle their appearance at a fair properly. The downside for the dealer is that attending fairs is time-consuming and expensive. A dealer who goes to five fairs a year – the top four plus one in their home city – will spend seven or eight weeks away from the gallery, including travel, set-up and take-down time. The month before a major fair consists of a phone and internet-based pre-fair, during which dealers contact collectors and collectors check in with dealers. Five fairs cost the dealer £200,000 to £300,000, sometimes more – often more than the rent on their home gallery. But dealers queue to take part, because other dealers do.

Opening night at fairs is by invitation only, to dealers, press, and selected major buyers and agents. Half the most important works will sell in the first hour, half of those in the first 15 minutes. Buyers race from booth to booth, committing to a purchase or asking for a "hold" – and the dealer may say: "Ten minutes only, and give me your mobile number." There is none of the gallery approach of: "I will come back and look on the weekend," or "Can I hang it in my home for 30 days?'".

Pricing contemporary art

The starting point in setting a price for the work of a new artist is the dealer's reputation. For a mainstream gallery, and for an oil painting on canvas by an artist with no gallery history, £3,000-£6,000 ($5,400-£10,800) is about right. This is high enough to convey the status of the gallery and not cast doubt on the work or the artist, but low enough that if the work is promising, it will sell. If the first show sells out quickly, the dealer will say the pricing was correct.

The artist may be underwhelmed, because even selling out one show a year at new-artist prices means she is still living below the poverty line. She is told to view today's low prices as an investment in her artistic future. She also learns that in the primary-art market, price creates value and buyer satisfaction rather than reflecting it. This is what economists call the Veblen effect: the satisfaction derived by the buyer comes from the art, but also from the list price or conspicuous price paid for it. If the real price reflects a discount the satisfaction is greater, because friends assume you paid the higher list price.

The same principle holds with a designer handbag or diamond engagement ring. The higher the perceived price, the more valuable the object is seen to be and the greater the buyer satisfaction.

As an artist becomes better known, the price of her work is based on reputation and history. If the artist's first show sold out at £4,000, work in the second show might be priced at £6,000, and in a third at £10,000-£12,000. Successive shows will come 18 to 24 months apart. Publications, exhibitions or other forms of recognition for the artist produce faster price escalation.

Because the initial price reflects the dealer's reputation, a superstar dealer multiplies each price level by a factor of three or four, with larger increments. If a mainstream dealer charges £4,000 for a modestly sized work in an artist's first show, Gagosian's gallery might charge £12,000-£15,000 for work of comparable size and quality. Gagosian's reputation for showing promising artists makes work from that gallery more valuable. On resale the Gagosian provenance will bring a higher price.

It is always considered better to sell out a show than to achieve maximum prices for a few works. The dealer must never reduce an artist's list price. Never. Each successive show must be priced higher than the last. In an art world where the illusion of success is everything, a price decrease for an artist would signal that she was out of favour. Demand for her work would fall. With a second price decrease, demand might disappear.

Even when an art market collapses, galleries generally do not drop prices for their own artists. After the 1990 crash, the New York dealer Leo Castelli said that under no circumstances would his list prices be lowered. However, his artists were told that it would be necessary to offer more generous discounts to museums and collectors. Discounts permit dealers to maintain high list prices as a sign of an artist's success, while generating sales and gaining collectors' gratitude.

Rather than be forced to lower list prices, the dealer will almost always drop an artist. Prices can restart at a lower level if the artist finds representation at a new gallery, which doesn't have to worry about betraying former buyers.

Buying art

For the novice collector, there is a ritual to be performed before gaining a place in the artist queue. The gallery wants your CV, a statement of what you will do with the art, and your pledge to be patient for a year until a painting might become available. Buying has nothing to do with offering to pay full price; you might still get a discount. It is not unlike a woman wanting to purchase a Hermès Birkin bag being asked what sort of social events she attends, before being assigned an appropriate place in the Birkin queue.

Waiting lists serve the function of getting art to the right people, and trying to control what happens to the art after it has been purchased – in particular, trying to ensure that it will not be flipped at auction. Working with an art adviser may help the collector move up the list, because keeping the adviser happy may produce future referrals for the gallery. An adviser may also have a negative influence, especially if he demands an additional commission from the gallery without telling the collector he is doing so.

Many "waiting lists" reflect gallery hype – a more sophisticated form of putting red "sold" dots on work that has not actually sold. Gallery owners are happy to announce there is a waiting list, but not how many collectors might be on it (or who they are). Some lists are just for "first right to view", and some names on the list represent people who simply want to look like they are players. Lists for artists such as Mehretu, John Currin, Cecily Brown, Damien Hirst and Matthias Weischer are certainly genuine, "I will buy sight unseen when a work becomes available". Some lists arise because of the very limited production of market-savvy artists. When Charles Saatchi acted as patron to Jenny Saville early in her career, he reportedly limited her production-for-sale to six paintings per year. In selling out her 1999 show at Gagosian, Saville ended up with a waiting list of two dozen names, potentially four years of artistic output.

Art critics

Critics are closely associated with the world of artists, dealers and art fairs, and might be expected to be major art-world players. They are not. Dealers, auction house specialists and collectors insist that critics have little influence on the contemporary art world – not on artists' success, and certainly not on prices. Why should critics have so little clout, and what role do they play?

Some art journalists have a background in art history, or are working artists. Critics may be professors, museum curators, former artists, or spouses of artists. While journalists try to remain at arm's length from the art community, critics are often personally involved with the artists they write about. Critics say their role is to explain the artist's work – and without personal contact, how could they understand its context and meaning?

You might think that either kind of journalist could make or break the career of an artist. Make, never; break, only rarely. Jerry Saltz, senior art critic of New York's Village Voice and three times nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in criticism, states it nicely: "At no time in the last 50 years has what an art critic writes had less of an effect on the market than now. I can write that work is bad and it has little-to-no effect, and I can write it is good and the same thing will happen. Ditto if I don't write about it at all."

So do critics or auction prices best predict the long-term importance of an artist's work? The answer, as regards modern art, is that the market is a much better predictor than the critic. There are several good studies by Galenson, which rank artists by their single highest-priced work. The highest prices go to great artists such as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Cy Twombly and Gerhard Richter, none of whom received uniformly favourable critical reviews for their early work.

End game

Where are the contemporary art market and its runaway prices going? The answer to this question is still open, although all trends are unfavourable to dealers.

Art prices are propelled by what is known in economics as a ratchet effect. A ratchet turns in only one direction, and then locks in place. A price ratchet means that prices are sticky in a downward direction but free to move up. The ratchet concept is easily understood when applied to labour markets – think of what would happen if the board of directors of every art museum required that their chief executive's pay level be in the top quarter of his peer group.

If the ratchet, perceived scarcity and too much money consistently push prices up, is the entire contemporary art market just a bubble? Art dealers and auction specialists never use the word crash, and hate the word bubble. The immutable rule in a buoyant art market is that the participants suspend all doubt. The art market is simply referred to as being in an extended boom period. Art writer Marc Spiegler compares this approach to teenagers having unprotected sex in the belief that they can never get pregnant.

Bubble or not, every auction specialist warns of a market correction. The question is how hard the landing will be: whether the bubble will burst like a birthday balloon, or just lose a little air and become flabby, like a discarded balloon a month after the party.

A greater danger than economic reversal may be a rejection of the practice of emulating popular taste that underlies contemporary art buying. What happens then if group cultural intelligence and connoisseurship go into reverse, and the market realises all at once that Jim Hodges' No-One Ever Leaves, the crumpled leather jacket in the corner of the gallery, might not actually be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars – or even thousands? Is it all a deck of cards that will come crashing down when lots of collectors try to dump work because a few others have?

Extracted from The $12 Million Stuffed Shark by Don Thompson (£14.99), which is published by Aurum on 24 January. To order a copy for the special price of £13.49 (free P&P) call Independent Books Direct on 0870 079 8897 or visit www.independentbooksdirect.co.uk

2007年12月14日 星期五

A Christmas gift from Damien Hirst to the Tate

By Arifa Akbar, Arts Reporter
Friday, 14 December 2007

Damien Hirst has given four seminal works of art to the Tate from his personal collection, including a copy of his Turner Prize-winning installation. He plans to donate up to 30 of his most celebrated works to the gallery.

This is the first major gift to a museum by Hirst, the world's most expensive living artist. He said yesterday that he wanted "these pieces to represent me properly" and that he had been in discussion with the gallery for the past three years.

"It means a lot to me to have works in the Tate. I would have never thought it possible when I was a student," he said. "I think giving works from my collection is a small thing if it means millions of people get to see the work displayed in a great space."

These first four works, which will be exhibited at Tate Britain by next spring, are The Acquired Inability to Escape, which was included in his first solo exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1992; Life Without You, from 1991, a companion to the cabinet piece Forms Without Life which is already in Tate's collection; one of the first of Hirst's dead fly paintings entitled Who is Afraid of the Dark?; and the exhibition copy of Mother and Child Divided, which is currently on display at Tate Britain and is a version of the original installation for which he won the Turner Prize in 1995.

As part of his programme to donate up to 30 works to the Tate, Hirst has bought back pieces from gallerists including Charles Saatchi as well as dealers and auctioneers. The next phase of giving will be in another three to four years.

Nicholas Serota, director of the Tate, said the gift was an "astonishing gesture". "With such a limited budget for acquisitions, and when art market prices are high, Tate is indebted to international contemporary artists such as Damien Hirst for working with us on building the collection," he said.

The Acquired Inability to Escape is a large vitrine containing cigarettes, lighter, ashtray and stubs, apparently referring to themes of luxury, danger and death. Life Without You consists of an arrangement of sea shells laid on a desk. In Who is Afraid of the Dark?, dead flies cover the entire canvas, while Mother and Child Divided comprises a cow and calf, each bisected.

2007年10月29日 星期一

Saatchi gets a room at the Hermitage to showcase art collection

By Arifa Akbar, Arts Reporter
Monday, 29 October 2007

The State Hermitage Museum, which houses one of the world's most celebrated art collections including imperial works from Tsarist Russia and masterpieces by Michelangelo, Rubens and Rembrandt, is to create a "Charles Saatchi room" to showcase the British collector's most cutting-edge acquisitions.

The vast museum in St Petersburg, which consists of six buildings including the Winter Palace and owns three million works, hopes to display as much of Saatchi's works as possible in a dedicated room of "rotating displays".

A spokeswoman for Mr Saatchi said he had agreed to loan his contemporary works, which range from the conceptual creativity of the Young British Artists in the 1990s to avant-garde Chinese artists working under or referring critically to Mao's regime.

Mr Saatchi confirmed that curators from the Hermitage had approached him with the idea of creating a room named after him, adding: "I am a Hermitage groupie, one of the museum's greatest admirers."

The room will be in former government offices in Palace Square, which are being restored to provide a home for the Hermitage's collection of 19th- to 21st-century art, according to November's edition of The Art Newspaper .

Dimitri Ozerkov, the new curator of contemporary art at the Hermitage, said he was keen to broaden the museum's displays to include works which were unfamiliar to generations of Russians who were denied access to contemporary art during the Soviet regime. The museum is also trying to borrow Damien Hirst's diamond-encrusted skull for display in St Petersburg by next year.

Mr Ozerkov approached Mr Saatchi because of his international standing as a pioneer of future art stars. He has famously championed artists such as Stella Vine, Paula Rego, Hirst and Tracey Emin, who are sometimes referred to as his "discoveries".

Works by Chinese artists, including some who worked under an oppressive communist regime, will be among the first to travel to Russia, although they could be followed by the works of the YBAs at a late date. Chinese artworks to be displayed in Russia will include Zhang Xiaogang's A Big Family, from 1995, for which Saatchi paid $1.4m, the highest price for a contemporary Chinese artist at the time, as well as Shi Xinning's Mao and McCarthy, from 2005.

The move to create the room follows the opening of Saatchi's USA Today exhibition unveiled in Russia last week after its launch at the Royal Academy in London last year.

The opening of the show marks the launch of the Hermitage's 20/21 project, which is an attempt to extend the museum's display of art produced after the 1917 Communist Revolution. The scheme's adviser is Sir Norman Rosenthal, exhibitions secretary at the RA.

A Saatchi Gallery spokeswoman said that the idea to have a room specifically dedicated to changing displays of art was first brought up at meeting in London when the director of the Hermitage, Professor Mikhail Piotrovsky, met Mr Saatchi to discuss the 20/21 initiative.

Mr Ozerkov said: "We wanted to start our programme of contemporary art with a very important name and we came up with Saatchi. He is one of the most important players in contemporary art and the person most closely related to big British names such as Hirst and Emin."

2007年10月28日 星期日

Provocative posters win Saatchi's 'art idol' contest

By Andrew Johnson
Sunday, 28 October 2007

Meet the heir to Tracey Emin's throne. Sarah Maple, a 22-year-old Muslim from Brighton, is crowned the best of the new young British artists, The Independent on Sunday can reveal. She beat 20 contenders in a competition organised by the art collector Charles Saatchi and judged by the sculptor Antony Gormley and the gallery owner Sadie Coles.

Lord Saatchi has enlisted the aid of established artists to select the winners of the first "art idol" competition. Of the four finalists, three already have already been snapped up by collectors.

Maple's work features photographs of herself in politically provocative situations. The "Vote for Me" series, which won her the competition from an initial entry of hundreds of final-year students, shows her dressed as a Playboy bunny or in hijab with the slogan "Vote for Me – or else you're sexist/homophobic".

Gormley described her work as "direct and playful". He added: "She is playing out, in a way, notions of Western freedom of choice in terms of identity. It's very emotive stuff. She is using the female notion of appropriateness to explain political and personal realism." Maple's work now belongs to Channel 4, which co-sponsored the New Sensations competition.

She said yesterday: "I did a mock political campaign. My work takes the mick out of political correctness gone mad. I got an angry response from some people. It was good to get a reaction, but I do think PC is daft. I think a lot of people are trying to make sure that nobody gets offended.

"I'll probably move on from that now. I don't want to be the one who just does work about Islam. A lot of my work is about identity."

The competition was open to art students in their final year of study. Hundreds of entries were whittled down to 20.

The art collector Anita Zabludowicz, also a judge, has bought the entries of two of the other four finalists, Marcus Lanyon, 26, and Mark Melvin, 28, both from London. "I was incredibly surprised by the excellence of the work. Their art seemed to me to be of museum quality." The entry of the fourth finalist, Mie Olise Kjaergaard, 33, has been bought by a private collector.

2007年10月3日 星期三

Zoo: Behind the scenes at Britain's coolest art fair

Soraya Rodriguez is the director of London's Zoo Art Fair. But as the exhibitors set out their stalls, she tells Alice Jones why you can't put a price on creativity

Ciaran Murphy, 'Palm Trees From Below', 2007. Courtesy Mother's Tankstation, Dublin

Wednesday, 3 October 2007

Until just four months ago, Soraya Rodriguez was running Zoo Art Fair from her old bedroom at her mother's house. These days, Rodriguez and her team operate from fashionable Whitechapel, east London , a much more fitting home for the fair that began as a satellite to Frieze four years ago but is now quietly making its name as a younger, cooler alternative in its own right.

Last year its showcase of emerging artists from young commercial galleries and non-commercial collectives and spaces took £1.7m in sales and drew visitors such as Tracey Emin, the Chapman Brothers and Peter Blake, while Charles Saatchi, and curators Norman Rosenthal and Nicholas Serota were spotted wandering the stands.

This year, Zoo Art Fair has a new home behind the Royal Academy. Leaving behind not only the quirky location that gave the fair its name but also Regent's Park, home to Frieze, is a bold move that demonstrates just how far the fair has come since it first set out its stall among the penguin pools of London Zoo. "It's good to shake things up," says Rodriguez. "I like doing things in threes. An old boss of mine used to say that in the first year everyone loves you, in the second year you have to sustain it and in the third year you have to start to change."

The Burlington Gardens building used to house the Museum of Mankind, to which Rodriguez was a frequent visitor during her days studying sculpture. Now 35, she embarked on a career in art with a BA at Liverpool University, then an MA at the Royal College.

"I was very intent on being Michelangelo by the age of 26, but that didn't quite work out," she says wryly. After a two-year break from the art world, Rodriguez joined the publications department at the Royal Academy, where she met Max Wigram. A year later she left to help Wigram with his business, acting as his "mini-me" as he expanded his gallery from his front room to his bedroom, eventually going on to become director of exhibitions at the New Bond Street gallery.

Three years later, Rodriguez upped sticks again. Within two weeks she had bumped into David Risley and Zoo was born. "Things like Max and Zoo could only have happened if I'd jumped ship without a clue as to what might happen. If I'd done the sensible thing and got a curating job at the Tate, none of this would have happened. I almost don't feel responsible for it."

But responsible she was, along with Risley, an art dealer who was curating the philanthropic Bloomberg Space (he has since left the fair to concentrate on his own gallery). "We had a nice blend of thinking of a fair not just as a commercial shop front," says Rodriguez. "We'd both been very excited about the arrival of Frieze. And it was clear, even from the first year, that it was turning into a calendar moment."

Rather than compete with Frieze, Risley and Rodriguez decided to add to it with a fair that would give a platform to the myriad young organisations that had sprung up in the capital since the millennium.

Having decided to become non-profit making ("because there was no other way of doing it"), they set about raising funds from collectors including Saatchi, Anita Zabludowicz and Jay Jopling. Many continue to sponsor the fair, under the title of "Honorary Zoo Keepers", and both Saatchi and Zabludowicz will have stands at this year's fair.

Since 2004, when there were 26 exhibitors, all from London, the fair has grown to take in regional and international organisations. This year, there will be 61 exhibitors from as far afield as Los Angeles, Tokyo and Rio de Janeiro, as well as exciting London spaces such as Riflemaker (which counts Gavin Turk, Jamie Shovlin and Julie Verhoeven among its artists) and Paradise Row, home to the cult photographer Poppy de Villeneuve. Rodriguez is hoping that sales will go up by another 30 per cent to top the £2m mark.

"London has kept its momentum," says Rodriguez. "In some ways that scares me because I wonder whether it's possible to sustain this much quality. Perhaps people think, 'the market's great, we can all live a nice lifestyle being a gallerist in a refrigerated space.' But then every year I think that and it's still going."

For now at least, there's no place she'd rather be. "I like being part of somewhere that's burgeoning, really struggling to achieve, constantly at it. It's much more die hard in London. You really have to think about it when you devote your life to it here."

So what should visitors be looking to buy? There is "something for everyone" from £50 imitation Bic pens by Gemma Holt on the Associates stand, to The Rape of the Sabine Women, an epic video artwork by Eve Sussman and the Rufus Corporation from the New York gallery Roebling Hall, costing £100,000. But it's not all about the price.

"People irritate me going on about the affordability of art. There is nothing affordable about art – making it isn't affordable, showing it isn't affordable, insuring, transporting, writing about it. It's a stupid idea to think that we have to tell the public that this is the only way they can access it. The most affordable thing in art is a Tate Modern ticket. You can pay £7 and own it for an afternoon and have an experience of it, which is the true thing that you take away and you don't have worry about the insurance, the transport, the cataloguing, the archive. How affordable is that?"

Rodriguez is equally dismissive of hedge-funders who tie up their assets in canvas. "It'll be a walk in the park for one sunny afternoon, but when the weather changes they won't come back. And who needs them? If you really love something, buy it. If you want to live with it and have tiny pieces of brain surgery done to you every day, then it's a good thing to do. Otherwise, buy a car or buy a dress," says Rodriguez. "It's funny how people expect art to give back this huge dividend on investment. If you spent £5,000 on a Christian Dior dress, you wouldn't eyeball the dress vendor and say 'is it going to cost twice as much in three years?' Why make art do that? It's not fair. Just buy it and love it."

Royal Academy of Arts, 6 Burlington Gardens, London W1 (020-7247 8597; www.zooartfair.com), 12 to 15 October

2007年9月26日 星期三

Gallery in a pickle as Hirst's cow and calf spring a leak

By Arifa Akbar, Arts Reporter
Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Buying a work by Damien Hirst is always going to be a costly exercise. He is, after all, the highest-selling living artist on the planet whose pieces command unprecedented prices. So spare a thought for Oslo's Museum of Modern Art, which was forced to return the artist's installation of a bisected cow and calf for repairs after the tank of formaldehyde they were in sprang a leak.

Just over a year after Hirst's famous shark was found to be suffering from rot, a second pickled piece, the 1995 Turner Prize-winning Mother and Child Divided, had to be sent back to the artist's studio for emergency repairs, The Art Newspaper will report in its October edition. The tank was on display at the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art in Oslo when the leak was spotted. The work was immediately sent to the artist's studio in London for emergency repairs. It brings into question the longevity of contemporary works of art that are made with unconventional materials. Gunnar Kvaran, the museum's director, said the damage was caused by a flaw in the glass, and some formaldehyde was lost. "Our insurance will probably have to cover the costs of conservation," he added.

Although only one case in the work was found to be damaged in June, all four parts of the installation were sent back to Hirst. The work was the gallery's most popular and will not be returned until next year.

Grete Arbu, head of collections at the museum, said it had been discussing conservation of the work with the artist before the leak was discovered.

"It had been installed permanently in 1997 and it was just getting tired," she said. "The pressure inside the container is enormous. We just noticed a small leak on the floor beneath the glass, and we sent it back within the week.

"Formaldehyde is very dangerous material. The same container will be kept but the layers of glass will be replaced. We could see it needed to be conserved.

"Many of the contemporary artists' works need to be repaired because they work with so many different techniques, so these things can't last a thousand years," she added. The museum is believed to have bought the piece in 1996, for about £135,000 from White Cube Gallery. It has since acquired several other pieces by Hirst. The intricate restoration work is anticipated to be "quite expensive."

A new version of Mother and Child Divided will be lent by Hirst for the Turner Prize retrospective opening next week, which traces past winners in the prize's history. The original was deemed "too fragile to travel" by the Tate, which has used the artwork as a key image in its promotional poster campaign. A spokeswoman for Hirst's company, Science Ltd, confirmed the leak was being repaired.

A statement read: "The 1993 work is undergoing repair as a minor leak has appeared in one of the tank's seams – this is not a major repair job. Damien has made a second version of this piece for the Tate retrospective." Last year, Hirst was to replace the rotting shark in his The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, which was bought by the American collector, Steve Cohen from Charles Saatchi, in a deal brokered by the Gagosian Gallery for a reported £6.5m three years ago. It was found to have deteriorated dramatically since it was unveiled at the Saatchi Gallery in 1992. The chemical solution that surrounded it had become murky and the shark had changed shape.

2007年7月23日 星期一

Saatchi's new stars: collector prepares for new gallery opening

As the world's most influential art collector prepares to open his new gallery on the King's Road, he reveals the latest crop of six contemporary artists he has alighted on. Exclusive report by Arifa Akbar

Monday, 23 July 2007

Charles Saatchi: art patron, showman, cultural impresario. To some, he has done more than any other to shake up the contemporary art world and enliven the British scene with remarkable, visionary collections. To others, he is the former ad man whose taste for the bold and the brash, for the controversial and the confrontational, has started a trend for a generation of artwork that rewards shock-value but little else.

The man who set in motion the "Saatchi decade" with a collection that comprised works by both the best known and the most obscure figures in conceptual art can be relied upon to provoke a sharp divergence of views in critical circles the world over. But by now, with the Young British Artists he plucked from anonymity in the early 1990s regarded as undeniable greats, one thing is beyond debate: Mr Saatchi sure knows a good thing when he sees it.

Damien Hirst, one of the first youthful talents to benefit from the dealer's perceptive eye, is now the world's most expensive living artist. Tracey Emin is a name instantly synonymous with creative courage combined with and unshakeable star-quality. The Chapman Brothers, Stella Vine, Mark Quinn: the list goes on and on. But, as Emin herself admitted with characteristic honesty at this year's Venice biennale, the Young British Artists are no longer exactly young. "We're Middle-Aged British Artists now," was her deadpan verdict. "MABAS."

And so what now for the man with the Midas touch who has made his own career out of making the careers of others? Simple: to find the stars of tomorrow.

Mr Saatchi is notoriously media-shy and known to be so reclusive that he eschews the opening nights of his own exhibitions and rarely gives interviews. But today The Independent can exclusively reveal the identities of the up-and-coming artists whom he credits with the talent to transform the art scene in a similar way to the YBAs.

There are six of them, all fresh faces on the contemporary art scene, the youngest in her mid- twenties and the eldest in his fifties. One displays a preoccupation with disturbing images of male sexuality, another prioritises the elusive quality of "fun" above almost all else. What they all have in common, however, is a raw talent that has convinced the world's most famous collector. Now all he has to do is convince everyone else. To this end, he intends to showcase these works along with established collections at the new Saatchi Gallery, on the King's Road, London, which will give free admission to the public in partnership with Phillips de Pury & Company auction house.

Saatchi intends to champion the work of these "emerging" artists, plucked from across the world, in the 70,000 square feet of exhibition space in the gallery, which is due to open in January.(2008) After having sold some of the work of the YBAs that he became so synonymous with a decade earlier, he described how this latest venue would function as a launch-pad for young, previously unprofiled artists. "The new gallery is going to have a clearly defined role to introduce very new art and artists from Britain and the rest of the world," he said.

He added that the gallery was aimed at introducing "as many people as possible to very contemporary art and make it easily accessible to art students and all schools." The new collection includes artists from all over the world, from contemporary Chinese artists as well as Londoners, such as Barry Reigate, a 36-year-old Croydon-born painter. Reigate was showing his work "Flies around the Fury Flotsam" at a group show at the Curator's Base gallery in London in 2005 when Saatchi wandered in and bought his painting, and later acquired three more. His canvases are described as "pop-porn at its best" containing hedonist visions of disembodied breasts and phalluses. Another of Saatchi's finds is Rudolph Stingel, who, according to the Saatchi Gallery, offers conceptualism with "Blue Peter" simplicity. The Italian artist, born in Merano, had no formal training when he began his career as a portrait painter straight after high school. He had been exhibiting around Europe and America when Saatchi spotted his work.

A spokeswoman revealed his buying methods, which included an arrangement with international art dealers in which he could "view" works for 24 hours before deciding on a sale.

"He gets sent images sent by about 25 or so of young dealers in New York and Los Angeles and they have now got a system in place whereby if he thinks any of the images are interesting, he get the works sent over here for 24 hours so he can see them properly. If they are not for him they can be sent back the following day," she said.

Six of the best?

BARRY REIGATE

Jokingly describing himself as "the blackest white man in art" and "the Ali G of the artworld", Reigate (right) has made it his mission to put the fun back into the profession. "I grew up with Jamaicans and West Indians in Streatham and I play on the idea of being loud and carnivalesque," he said. His work, characteristically painted in squiggly brush marks and smears, captures contemporary schmaltz with great wit and effervescence.

PHOEBE UNWIN

Born in Cambridge in 1979, Unwin is one of the youngest artists in the collection. Her work focuses mainly on portraits, taking in historical references and is described as "painterly" with a keen focus on texture and colour. She has exhibited at The Slade as well as the Anthony Wilkinson Gallery, in Bethnal Green, east London. Saatchi bought five of her paintings from her degree show.

THOMAS HOUSEAGO

Born in Leeds in 1972, his work (below) is said to "playfully subvert the expectation of sculpture" by drawing references to Classicism, Cubism and Futurism. His monumental structures are often figurative and mythological and, in spite of their size, often appear almost comically flimsy. Much of his work tends to border on abstract art, with rough hewn and incomplete forms that highlight the process of making a work of art.

RUDOLPH STINGEL

Despite not presenting his art on traditional canvases, Stingel regards himself as painter nonetheless. He invites the audience to interact with his installations and photographs, which he sees as public "collaborations". The Italian has covered the walls of a gallery in silver insulation panels and allowed people to make them in whichever way they felt. In his 1991 New York debut exhibition, his entire collection consisted of a bright orange rug in an otherwise empty gallery.

CLAYTON BROTHERS

Collaboration is central for the American-born brothers Rob and Christian, whose relationship is described by the Saatchi Gallery as "resonating through every aspect of their paintings and installations". They are said to create artworks together on an intuitive basis but seldom work on a canvas at the same time or discuss their projects until they are complete. Playing off their "unspoken synergy", they take turns inventing, adding to and editing each piece. They draw inspiration from their immediate environment.

TALA MADANI

The Iranian artist, born in Tehran in 1981, studied at Yale University School of Art and exhibited at the school's graduate show in 2005, winning the Schickle-Collingwood Prize before going on to study a masters in Fine Art. Her work is tough, confrontational and often hard to look at. Madani refuses to shy away from political controversy, and symbolises suicide bombers with depictions of pink pastries.

2007年7月17日 星期二

The Warhol tradition: The many faces of Stella Vine

Diana, Kate Moss, Delia Smith ... all have been portrayed by an artist whose work chronicles our celebrity-obsessed times. Now she is the subject of a retrospective

By Arifa Akbar
Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Packing in her job as a stripper and signing up for part-time art classes paid off for Stella Vine when Charles Saatchi sauntered into her gallery, above a butcher's shop in east London, to take a look around.

A large portrait of the late Princess Diana in a state of emotional distress with paint dripping from her blood-red lips, calling on her butler Paul Burrell for help, originally priced at £100, caught Saatchi's eye and he bought it for £600. Like so many of Saatchi's purchases, it propelled Vine, not least because of the controversy surrounding the painting and her subsequent works of the princess, of Rachel Whitear, a teenage drug addict whose painted image so offended her grieving parents and of Kate Moss's alleged drug use.

The iconic painting of Princess Diana has lost much of its shock value as it hangs at Vine's first major British retrospective, opening today at Modern Art Oxford. But there are other "shockers" that may make up for its now anodyne effect.

Controversy has remained Vine's calling card. While she is still in the process of painting the prostitutes who were murdered in Ipswich last year, it is the images on display - including Princess Diana's car wreck, a portrait of the missing Manic Street Preachers band member, Richey Edwards, with a razor-slashed torso, and the model Lily Cole sitting in a tub of red paint - that are bound to raise eyebrows and cultural debates on the cult of celebrity and the ethical boundaries of the artist.

Other pieces in the exhibition of 100 works, incorporating Vine's trademark drips of paint falling from the lips and chin of her famous subjects, include images of Pete Doherty, Nigella Lawson with a chocolate cake and Courtney Love taking her knickers off in the back of a taxi, as well as an entire series around flame-haired supermodel Cole.

A painting of the Celebrity Big Brother stars, Samuel "Ordinary Boy" Preston and Chantelle Houghton, which was used as the invitation to their wedding, also features in the show, although the couple have since split.

Vine, born Melissa Jane Robson in 1969, has been dividing critical opinion for as long as she has been painting and this comprehensive show is bound to reinvigorate the same hostilities and adulation as previous works. Her examination of celebrity culture has been described as coming from the same tradition as Andy Warhol, the founder of pop art.

Andrew Nairne, director of the Modern Art Oxford, defended Vine's work as highly emotional and bold. "She looks at the mix of who society considers to be important, who we revere and respect. The paintings seem to be made with love and although they seem to have an incredible naïvety in style, they are actually very sophisticated with a great emotional power behind them," he said.

The "Lily Cole" series highlights many of the themes Vine seeks to explore. In the collection, she shows the model holding a pink telephone with the text "Lily breaks up with her boyfriend in Bulgari, Marc Jacobs and Still by J-Lo", while in another, she is shown swooning alongside some tablets with the caption, "Lily overdoses in Marc Jacobs". Mr Nairne said it is the inclusion of an "emotional" life given to the model that gives the work such force.

Germaine Greer is another Vine fan. In her introduction to the catalogue accompanying the show, she writes: "As a woman paints her face every day, Stella Vine paints the painted face, the mask behind which celebrity females take cover even as they flaunt themselves. Paint cannot lie. Every brushstroke threatens disintegration. The mascara runs. The rouge stands out on the cheeks like a bloody bruise. The eyes glitter with unshed tears or is it terror? Or rage? The paint wells and dribbles like the blood of the self-wounded. The surface heaves and slips. Underpainting grins through."

Mr Nairne said the wit in her work is marked by paintings such as Jose and Leya, featuring the Chelsea football club manager, Jose Mourinho as a matinee idol, alongside his dog and accompanied by the text, "I will always love you". The painting is inspired by Mourinho's arrest this year over a dispute about his dog's quarantine status. It was alleged that the Yorkshire terrier was taken out of the country and returned without going into quarantine.

Nairne argues that those who criticise Vine's work for being celebrity obsessed have missed the point. Her work is not only about celebrities, he says, but also about herself. For example, portraits of Moss and a young Princess Diana, both of whose sometimes tumultuous personal lives she identifies with, bear a resemblance to Vine. He said: "She is open to the idea these paintings are about her, that they are self portraits, and that they are actually about her, and by extension, they become about all of us and how we relate to our own self worth".

But others have written Vine off as a tasteless trickster whose shocking subject matter crosses the line into moral reprehensibility. David Lee, the editor of The Jackdaw, has called her a "brainless rotten painter" , while her painting Hi Paul Can You Come Over was nominated as one of the 10 worst paintings in Britain. A portrait of Princess Diana, Murdered, Pregnant and Embalmed, which was bought by George Michael for £25,000, was also condemned as "sick" by the red-top tabloids.

Vine has never appeared perturbed by the criticism. She has likened the commercial art world to the sex industry of which she had some knowledge in her former life. She once said: "The art world is exactly the same as the sex industry: you have to be completely on guard, you will get shafted, fucked over left, right and centre."

And for Vine's supporters, there is a suspected agenda against the former stripper and single mother who is regarded as an establishment outsider. "A few critics insist that she is not a real artist, but just trying it on," said Greer, adding, "They think her work is somehow fake, not seeing that it is about faking it, faking everything, from virtue and innocence to orgasms."

2007年7月16日 星期一

Hirst exhibition makes £130m in sales

By Arifa Akbar
Monday, 16 July 2007

Damien Hirst has become Britain's highest earning living artist after sales from his recent exhibition reached £130m.

But the centrepiece of his show at the White Cube gallery - a diamond-encrusted skull - may be sold to a private international collector.

If this happens, the artwork could be taken out of the country and Hirst's desire to see it displayed for longer in a gallery or museum may never be fulfilled.

Sales from the exhibition at the London gallery, which closed earlier this month, included a £10m work entitled Death Explained, consisting of a shark split in two.

If the skull is sold for its asking price, the total sales from the exhibition are likely to double his £135m personal fortune, even after paying a 25 per cent commission to the gallery.

There has been much speculation about whether the work, For the Love of God, which is priced at £50m, will be taken out of the country. The human skull, encrusted with more than 8,000 diamonds, has attracted the interest of collectors in the Middle Eastern, Russia and America.

In an interview with The Sunday Times, Tim Marlow, exhibitions director at the White Cube, said attempts were being made to find a buyer who would have it on public view for at least some period of time.

"We are trying to negotiate a deal with a museum or several museums so whoever buys the jewelled skull puts it on public display, or at least initially, rather than simply keeping it at home or in a vault away from the public gaze," he said.

But sources within the industry fear it may be sold to an individual collector rather than a gallery.

Charles Saatchi, one of Britain's biggest collectors of contemporary art, championed Hirst's work when it first emerged on the market in the 1990s. But he is not believed to be in the bidding for the skull.

In the past decade, Hirst has risen to one of the leading lights of the art world, and has come to distinguish himself from the Young British Artists movement of the 1990s. Last month, Sotheby's announced that a sale of Hirst's work had made him the most expensive living artist at auction. A pill cabinet, entitled Lullaby Spring sold for £9.6m.

His wealth is not only made up from the sales of artworks that can court record-breaking prices, but also from a highly valuable personal collection of works by the likes of Andy Warhol, Francis Bacon, Jeff Koons and Richard Prince.

2007年7月6日 星期五

Sold for £18.5m, a Raphael portrait that once cost $325

By Emily Dugan
Friday, 6 July 2007

A rare portrait by Raphael that had not been seen by the public for more than 40 years sold for £18.5m at Christie's last night. It was the largest sum ever paid at auction for a work by the Renaissance painter.

The work, an oil portrait of the Florentine ruler Lorenzo de' Medici which has been described as "the most important Renaissance portrait to be offered at auction for a generation", had been predicted to fetch between £10m and £15m.

But its recent history has been far from illustrious. Sold to the American collector Ira Spanierman for just $325 in 1968, the painting ­ then in poor condition ­ was regarded with scepticism by many, who doubted that it was the work of the Italian master.

Three years later, art historians confirmed that the work was indeed by Raffaello Sanzio, popularly known as Raphael, leaving Mr Spanierman sitting on a potential gold mine.

According to Christie's, the largest sum fetched for a Raphael at auction prior to this sale was a drawing sold in 1996, which went for £5.3m. This lower figure is in part due to the fact that it is so rare for his oil paintings, which are significantly more valuable than sketches, to be auctioned.

Private sales are more common for Raphael's works, and in 2004 the National Gallery paid £22m to stop his Madonna of the Pinks leaving the UK. The portrait sold yesterday, to a private collector, shows a sumptuously dressed Medici, draped in a shawl of gold and red with a delicately painted fur collar, standing against a rich green background.

The detail in the depiction of his robes is typical of the Italian master, who began his career in provincial church decoration, and came to be known as the "Prince of Painters".

The painting, which has been on display at Christie's in London since 30 June, is also politically important. It was commissioned by Medici's uncle, Pope Leo X, just before the duke got married to a wife he had never seen. The miniature portrait of his future wife that can be seen clutched in the sitter's hand gave the duke his first sneak preview of his betrothed. The pope was involved in the commission as he had personally arranged his nephew's marriage to Madeleine de la Tour D'Auvergne, a cousin of the king of France.

Lorenzo de' Medici, who was the Duke of Urbino and the ruler of Florence between 1513 and 1519, was the Charles Saatchi of the Renaissance. As one of the most influential art collectors of the time, he and his family commissioned a score of artists that reads like a Who's Who of artistic Florence. The masters patronised by the Florentine family included Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Donatello and Fillippo Lippi.

Richard Knight, the international director of Christie's old master department, said he was delighted the "remarkable" painting had finally come to auction. "The importance of the artist and the sitter, together with the provenance and the historical context behind this painting's creation, make it one of the most significant old master pictures to be offered at auction for a generation," he said.

Other masterpieces under the hammer at Christie's yesterday were a Pieta by the 17th-century Venetian artist Domenico Zampieri, and a portrait by the British Restoration painter and official artist to Charles II, Sir Peter Lely.

2007年6月24日 星期日

Saatchi stages 'art idol' competition to corner market in new young British artists

By Andrew Johnson
Sunday, 24 June 2007

In the week when Damien Hirst became the world's most expensive living artist and Tracey Emin returned triumphant from representing Britain at the Venice Biennale, Charles Saatchi, the man who discovered them, was poring over the work of hundreds of art students, hoping his patronage can bring another generation to prominence.

This time, with the help of Channel 4 and some of the biggest names in British contemporary art, he has launched an "art-idol" competition to find the new Young British Artists.

Hundreds of final-year art students have submitted entries to the 4 New Sensation competition, named after the Sensation exhibition of 1997. This week they were whittled down to a shortlist of 20, made available exclusively to The Independent on Sunday.

From those a final four will be chosen by a panel of the country's leading names in contemporary art - sculptor Antony Gormley, artist Sadie Coles, Tim Marlow, who runs the White Cube Gallery in Hoxton, Anita Zabludowicz, who is one of the UK's biggest collectors of contemporary art, and Kevin Lygo, Channel 4's director of television.

The shortlist includes a wide range of media from sculpture and photography to painting and video.

Ms Coles said she would be looking for artists to "develop a language that is theirs alone". "I will be looking for something that surprises me, that indicates potential for development and makes me think," she added. "Homage to other artists is OK. Pastiche or plagiarism is not. There is so much more good contemporary and old art to see in London that it should have a positive effect."

Sarah Maple, 22, one of the shortlisted artists, from Brighton, said her work is inspired by her upbringing by a father with a Christian background and a Muslim mother. "Identity and self image are my big influences," she said. "The integration of Muslims in Western society - it's hard for them to combine their culture and religion with a Western upbringing."

The final four will each have a short film about them broadcast on Channel 4. All 20 will also have their work exhibited at the Saatchi Gallery in October.

Charles Saatchi added: "Many of the students are just great, and I think the public will enjoy this strong new generation of artists."

2007年6月15日 星期五

Collectors declare RCA's class of 2007 its 'best degree show in years'

By Arifa Akbar
Friday, 15 June 2007

The graduates of the RCA have much to live up to. Tracey Emin graduated there; David Hockney and Peter Blake met there in the 1960s, and James Dyson found fame and fortune after studying at the Royal College of Art.

But according to art collectors who turned up in strength at yesterday's annual degree show, the class of 2007 have every chance of following in their footsteps. The exhibition displayed the work of 66 MA art students. Charles Saatchi, the gallery owner and collector, said it was the best RCA annual show he had seen for years.

Works included a giant inflatable balloon, a device that calculates a person's carbon footprint, a Google Earth carpet, and a set of photographs of teddy bears and toys borrowed from children's graves.

Nigel Rolfe, the show's curator and RCA tutor whose previous students include Gavin Turk and the Chapman brothers, said the work this year reflected a growing intellectual preoccupation and a move away from the attention-grabbing conceptual work of the Young British Artists. "As a peer group, they are aware of the art world and how to put their own work forward. Significant collectors have visited the show and many of the pieces are already sold."The exhibition opens today and ends on 28 June.

THE CLASS OF 2007

Simon Ward, 28, London

Takes photographs of inanimate objects using a flatbed scanner. Other work has included hand-written signs made by homeless people. Degree show includes photographs of toys, teddy bears and dolls found on children's graves. Pieces have been featured in the Swedish art magazine, Bon.

Anna Genger, 29, Germany

Large-scale paintings are very colourful and can look quite abstract, but often refers to flowers and organic matter. The pieces for Genger's degree show will be taken to the Upstairs gallery in Berlin for a first solo show. Work was also shown as part of the Frieze art fair last year. It has been bought by private collectors and is in Bank of America's art collection. Before coming to the RCA, Genger studied sculpture at the Slade.

Duncan Fitzsimmons, 25, Portsmouth

Designed a collapsible wheel for the degree show. Previously worked with Renault in France and with Nokia, on a project where a text message is sent using a finger writing letters in the air. Major manufacturers may pick up his folding wheel design.

Gemma Anderson, 25, Belfast

Creates life-size portraits of her friends and family drawn on copper etchings and hand-coloured, using traditional printmaking techniques. Work was printed on the same press, the John Haddon Press, used in the Great Exhibition.

Ryan Mosley, 26, Middlesex

Four figurative works proved so popular that all were sold within hours to collectors. All the works are informed by portraiture and derived from a mixture of art history, mythology and folk culture, united by a carnival theme. The degree show work has been selected for the Celeste Art Prize. Last year, Mosely won the Jerwood Prize in the travel scholarship show.

Jordi Canudas, 31, Spain

Specialises in furniture in the show, notably the Wallfa, a hybrid wall and sofa with a malleable border. Another work, Less Lamp, resembles a large eggshell which viewer has to break in order to let the light out. Exhibited at British Council's Milan Fair HQ show, Great Eastern Hotel, Aram gallery and in Barcelona.

2007年5月22日 星期二

Saatchi causes a new online sensation in China

By Clifford Coonan in Beijing
Tuesday, 22 May 2007

Britain's Saatchi Gallery marked its latest expansion in China's booming contemporary art market yesterday with the launch of a Mandarin-language website, which will allow artists to display their work online and interact with their peers around the world.

The launch of a Chinese version of the Your Gallery website - the world's largest interactive art gallery with 20 million hits a day - shows how hot the Chinese art market is. Your Gallery was launched last year to provide a free global platform for artists.

There are more than 20,000 artists in China and a further 1,000 students graduate each year from art school, but English is not widely spoken, making international communication difficult, plus there are still no more than 200 contemporary art galleries to show their work.

Annabel Fallon, the spokesperson for Saatchi, said the global interest in Chinese contemporary art meant artists in China needed a platform from which to show their work and learn about contemporary art practice in other countries. Meg Maggio, the director of Pekin Fine Arts, said the chatroom function of the site was particularly important.

"This is a wonderful way to introduce Chinese artists to as many other artists and curators and students as possible around the world," said Ms Maggio.

Chinese artists will be able to post their profiles and have them translated into English."It's very exciting for us to be one of the first fully interactive sites on the Chinese internet," Charles Saatchi said at an official launch in the trendy Danshanzi art district of Beijing.Mr Saatchi was an early champion of young British artists such as Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin, who have have a strong influence on China's rising stars.

An exhibition of avant-garde Chinese art at the Tate Liverpool features work by 18 artists, including Ai Weiwei and Zhuang Hui. And contemporary Chinese artists have set records at auctions in Hong Kong and New York.

Zhang Xiaogang's 1993 work, Tiananmen Square, sold for £1.2m at Christie's in Hong Kong in November, a record for the artist. Other names include Wang Guangyi, Yue Minjun, and Zeng Fanzhi. All are being wooed by galleries and collectors all over the world.

2007年5月17日 星期四

Record-breaking Rothko and Bacon sale confirms contemporary art market fever

By David Usborne in New York
Thursday, 17 May 2007

Any doubt that a new era has arrived in the contemporary art market was finally erased in New York on Tuesday night when a sale at Sotheby's saw bidders smash one record after another, most spectacularly when works by Mark Rothko and Francis Bacon came under the gavel.

Eliciting a gasp that echoed around the entire art world yesterday, an unidentified bearded bidder raised his paddle to pay $73m (£37m) for a Rothko canvas that had carried a pre-sale estimated price of $40m. It was the most ever paid for a Rothko and indeed for any single post-war artwork at auction.

The previous record for a contemporary piece was $27.1m set only last November. But the Rothko was not the only painting to cross that line. The Bacon canvas, Study from Pope Innocent X, sold for $52.7m, after being estimated to sell for $30m.

"We didn't expect them to sell as well as they did," Tobias Meyer, the auctioneer and head of the contemporary art department for Sotheby's, confessed when it was all over. "We're obviously thrilled with the results," he added, saying they "showed how aggressive and strong the contemporary art market is".

Records were set on Tuesday for a total of 15 artists, dead and living, including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Rauschenberg, Richard Prince, Tom Wesselmann, Hans Hofmann, Morris Louis and Dan Flavin.

For the first time, meanwhile, Sotheby's included roubles in its electronically displayed panel of currency conversions, indicating the growing presence of Russian buyers.

The prices paid "means that there clearly exists a huge interest in this field, and in the icons of contemporary art", commented Anthony Grant, a senior international specialist at Sotheby's. "When we can identify those icons, the sky can be the limit."

Among the few paintings that failed to make their low estimates and were withdrawn from sale were two by Jackson Pollock.

Experts noted that the extraordinary interest in the 1950 Rothko - an abstract oil dominated by a large block of luminous pink and entitled White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose) - may partly have been tied to the identity of the seller, David Rockefeller, philanthropist and chairman emeritus of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Mr Rockefeller bought the painting for $8,500 in 1960 and hung it in a waiting room outside his office when he was chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank. He had clearly decided to take advantage of the zooming art market to raise new funds which, he has said, will go entirely into his charitable endeavours. His personal worth has been put at $2.4bn.

Sotheby's had invested heavily in the Rothko, reportedly signing a guarantee in advance with Mr Rockefeller to pay him $46m regardless of the outcome of Tuesday's bidding.

It was a good night also for the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the seller of the untitled 1981 Basquiat. The piece was originally given to the museum by two New York collectors who bought it for $3,150 in the year that it was painted. It was sold on Tuesday to a telephone bidder for an astonishing $14.6m. The museum said it will use the proceeds to broaden its contemporary collection.

One of several paintings by the Scottish-born painter Peter Doig that were purchased by Sotheby's last year from Charles Saatchi was also put under the hammer. The work, The Architect's Home in the Ravine (1991), was estimated at between $1.2m and $1.8m and went to a bidder on the telephone for $3.6m.

2007年3月29日 星期四

Art competition: At a gallery near you

Thursday, 29 March 2007

Charles Saatchi may yet live to regret his reticence. When he launched his interactive art gallery last May he promised that he would not buy anything from the 25,000 artists displaying their work on the site for a year. When he finally logs on next month, he may find that he has been beaten to discovering the next Tracey Emin or Damien Hirst. Two weeks ago, The Independent offered readers the chance to put together a dream virtual art collection of works from Your Gallery. Now the winners can start building their real collection with prize money totalling £5,000.

Saatchi set up Your Gallery in May as a kind of temporary exhibition space following the closure of the County Hall gallery in 2005. Since then, it has taken off in a massive way, averaging six million hits a day, attracting both artists and buyers who wish to avoid the hefty percentages of the galleries by exhibiting and purchasing online.

Entrants were asked to choose five different works by five different artists, which were then judged by Independent art critic Sue Hubbard, who was looking for "a visual and intellectual coherence, thoughtfulness and emotional integrity and an intuitive eye; work that said something meaningful, considered and authentic".

Although Saatchi praises the high standard of the entries ­ "It comes as no surprise that Independent readers have such sophisticated taste. Many of the entrants had made great choices for their collections, so the winners did really well to stand out" ­ not all of the entrants avoided the pitfalls of curating and collecting. "Some people simply chose the pieces they liked most but which said nothing much when put together, others smothered their entries in turgid 'art speak', one mum even owned up to promoting her son!" says Hubbard.

"The collections I finally chose work together as groups to become more than the sum of their parts."

The first prize of £3,000 is awarded to Abbas William Akbari who impressed with his collection of black-and-white line drawings and photographs based on the themes of "Earth, creation and fragility", which examine the relationship between simplicity and complexity. "This was the first collection I saw and its quiet strength, along with a bold decision to narrow the collection down to black-and-white line drawings and photographs stayed with me as I looked through the other groups," says Hubbard.

"I like the element of abstraction and the way one work relates to another, how light and shade speak of human fragility and complexity and of subtle emotions barely stated."

The runners-up, who each receive £500, include Pam Glew whose mixed-media collection evoking isolation and solitude, also addresses the wider themes of environmental damage ­ Emissions is a bleakly beautiful photograph of factories puffing their smoke into the night air ­ and youth culture. The collection is given a blackly humorous conclusion with the final image, a cookie-cutter in the shape of a gun, called Shaping Young America. Sami Jalili's collection, showing a clear unity of form and colour is pulled together by the central hyper-real portrait. "The depopulated spaces became movingly articulated by the inclusion of the single, shut-eyed portrait full of ambiguous emotion," says Hubbard.

Julian Macqueen's collection "showed a highly developed eye" in its unity of soft colours and elemental imagery. Macqueen, who spends his lunch breaks wandering around the galleries of Old Street in London, chose the works because they are all "lovely stuff and commercial too, with enough tension between the welcoming colours and abstract presentation to prevent them from being in any way twee". Hubbard agrees. "The sense of colour and lightness was irresistible and denoted a sure and sophisticated sense of what makes a good painting."

Tom Morgan's collection of portraits and one sculpture nearly didn't make it to the winners' podium for his laconic reasoning. He chose the five works "because I liked them". "In fact," says Hubbard, "it is very emotionally coherent and talks subtly about human frailty. The inclusion of Bread Stair raised the emotional and metaphoric stakes of the whole collection."

As the successful amateur collectors move into the world of real collecting, Hubbard offers them some words of wisdom. "My advice to the winners would be simply to keep looking and reading. Knowledge of contemporary art and a discerning eye are essential to any good collection. Inform the head and then follow with the heart."

www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk

2007年2月1日 星期四

Young British Artists eclipsed by older generation

By Louise Jury, Arts Correspondent
Thursday, 1 February 2007

For the past decade or so it has been the Young British Artists who have grabbed the headlines, with artists such as Damien Hirst commanding £1m or more for their most ambitious works.

But there are now signs that older generations of major British painters and sculptors are being rediscovered at the auction houses by the new band of collectors in the UK.

Artists such as Bridget Riley, Anish Kapoor and Peter Doig have all broken the £1m barrier in the past year, to achieve prices that were at least double their pre-sale estimates.

And Cheyenne Westphal, the chairman of contemporary art for Sotheby's in Europe, is predicting that at the age of 75, the reclusive Frank Auerbach, who escaped Nazi Germany for Britain as a child, will be the next big thing. "There has been an unbelievable rise upwards in British painting over the last couple of years," she said.

"Overall the return to figurative work and to painting in the last five years makes you re-evaluate the older generation. I think Auerbach is poised to make the next big leap - if not this sale, it will happen."

Although high prices for the late Francis Bacon (record £7.9m set 2006) and for Lucian Freud (record £4.1m set 2005) have become a feature of the salerooms in recent years, many other artists have remained comparative bargains until now.

Untitled (Diagonal Curve) (1966), an early Pop Art masterpiece by Riley, 75, was estimated to make up to £400,000 at Sotheby's London last summer. It went for £1.18m .

Doig, 47, enjoyed his first million-pound painting when Iron Hill went for £1.128m in the same sales last June, two or three times more than estimated.

Another Doig, White Canoe, which was once owned by Charles Saatchi, is being sold in next Wednesday's contemporary art sale with an estimate of up to £1.2m.

Ms Westphal said: "He is defining a generation not just of British painters but of painters. You can't really collect figurative painting from the 1990s and not see Doig as probably the leading artist."

Although Auerbach is not yet in the seven-figure league, his painting, After Mornington Crescent II (1993), made £456,000 last year against an estimate of £250-350,000 and another work is expected to make up to £700,000 at next week's auction.

The Camden Theatre in the Rain was one of the stars of the Royal Academy exhibition, British Art in the 20th Century, and illustrated the poster for Auerbach's 1978 retrospective at the Hayward Gallery, London. It has been described as a masterpiece of his most artistically fertile and commercially sought-after period in the 1970s.

Talk of Auerbach's big leap was dismissed by his dealer. Geoffrey Parton, of Marlborough Fine Art, said: "He's a major artist who has been steadily building his reputation for 50 years. He has always done very well."

But Ms Westphal was adamant that the greater number of collectors in Britain was boosting interest.

Other factors can help. Anish Kapoor's profile in America was boosted by the installation last year of Sky Mirror, a huge mirror, on Fifth Avenue in New York, and Cloud Gate, a sculpture installed in Chicago's Millennium Park in 2004.Kapoor, 52, broke the million-pound barrier last November at Sotheby's New York with Untitled (1999), a piece in carved alabaster, which went for $2.256m (£1.186m).

2006年11月30日 星期四

BritArt: The next generation

Charles Saatchi created a sensation in the art world by putting the work of Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin and the Chapman Brothers on display. Now he's looking to find the next generation of talent with 'Stuart', a non-profit online gallery for students with something to show. In its first week, 600 have signed up - and the website has attracted 20 million hits. Watch this space

By Louise Jury
Thursday, 30 November 2006

Not all of them will end up in his collection, but the latest initiative from Charles Saatchi offers young art students a greater chance of success. The man who introduced the world to artists Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin, Rachel Whiteread and Sarah Lucas, and who is credited with changing the face of British art with his explosive Sensation exhibition in 1997, has now launched his latest venture, Stuart.

The Stuart (as in "student art") gallery, gives artists the opportunity to show their work in a virtual exhibition space from where they can be picked up by collectors. Such a facility has clearly been needed: since introducing a dedicated platform for art students, the Saatchi website has seen its hit-rate double to three million a day and, in its first week alone, Stuart attracted 600 submissions from around the world.

A non-profit-making site, where artists can sell their work without being charged commission, Stuart could be considered a logical extension of Charles Saatchi's long-term interest in student work. A subsection of Saatchi's website Your Gallery, which already hosts a free global exhibition space for 18,000 artists, Stuart has been described as a unique opportunity for graduates hoping to get their work recognised on a wider stage. In addition, the discussion board on the site enables artists to share ideas, inspirations and advice with each other.

"When I was a student we would never have dreamt of having something like this," says the artist Paula Rego. "It's brilliant for students to show their work and see what is going on with other students worldwide."

Grayson Perry, the winner of the 2003 Turner Prize, agrees. "It's innovative ideas like this which will bring on new waves and changes in art. This type of innovation will always produce new, exciting things."

And although the man famous for showcasing the YBAs (Young British Artists) has not yet bought anything from the site, he does insist that he views the work of every new student who signs up. "There are a number of really very interesting artists on Stuart that I have already passed on to dealers that I work closely with, both in the UK and in the States," says Saatchi.

So far, around a third of the students are from the UK, one third from America and one third from the rest of the world, from Turkey to Slovakia. Yet the Saatchi Gallery contacted only art galleries in London to kickstart the process. The surge of interest appears to stem from word of mouth.

Nevertheless, not everyone is convinced by the project. "Sometimes you come back from an art school visit, saying to anyone who will listen: you just wouldn't believe how terrible some of them are," says The Independent's art critic Tom Lubbock. "Now the world can see. The serious question is whether these sites will provide artists - good or bad - with a significant alternative, direct-sale marketplace, which bypasses the gallery system with its enormous percentages. That seems doubtful.

"Most rich art-collectors aren't as bold as Saatchi is himself - they'd be reluctant to buy on a whim out of the blue. But another possibility is the development of a very broad 'general public' art market. That would presumably mean artists devoting themselves to relatively cheap, home-sized and maybe reproducible artworks, rather than big, expensive, unique museum pieces. For ambitious artists that would be a big and perhaps intolerable reversal of priorities."

In the meantime, the site continues to grow apace. While he may not be directly responsible for creating the next generation of Young British Artists, Saatchi is certainly the driving force behind them. Is the next big thing already online? Time will tell.

www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/stuart

Sophie Rees, 21, Fine Art Painting, University of Brighton

"Stuart is benefiting students on a global scale. It enables us to communicate our work, ideas and philosophies internationally. As students, we do not usually have the facilities and capital to exhibit our work regularly; the Saatchi website has given us the opportunity to do so."

Federico Gallo, 31, MA Communication Art & Design, Royal College of Art

"Stuart is a fun, fast way to exchange contact details, thoughts, info and samples - almost like having many talented minds from all over the world in one room. It is an easy way (the website is nicely designed and simple to use) to see and be seen, to learn about new, creative people, techniques and opportunities."

Tori Murphy, 26, Fine Art, Kingston University

"It's the first time as art students that we can communicate with and see the work of our contemporaries from all over the world. I have already been in contact with people from Canada, Dublin and all over the States."

Ally Mobbs, 22, Fine Art: Print-Making and Digital Media, University of the Arts, London (UAL)

"Stuart is a good alternative to other networking sites, as it offers online space to art students. After graduation I could quickly find possible collaborators on it or people with experience and knowledge that I do not have to ask for help."

Vicky Newman, 22, Fine Art, Falmouth College of Arts

"It is quite easy to feel 'safe' in a bubble of tutors and fellow students, and quite out of touch with the real world. I have found Stuart excellent in putting me in contact with new voices of other students around the world, giving fresh interpretations of my work and hopefully preparing me for life after a BA."

Jayne Archard, 22, Fine Art, Kingston University

"It appeals to me as an online exhibition space - I can share my work, ideas and interests with other artists beyond the studio environment. There's something really exciting about being involved with this new and fast-growing online art community. It gives me an invaluable chance to network with new people in creative fields."

Eleanor Lindsay Fynn, 25, MA Photography and Urban Culture, Goldsmiths College

"I use Stuart as a means to find other artists working around similar themes to me. At the moment I am curating a show on 'Alienation' using both known and unknown artists, and have been building connections and getting ideas through Stuart."

Mark Davey, 21, BA school, The Slade School of Fine Art

"I put my work on Stuart because it's a great new way to get your work seen by all types of people, and I like how it is people's own content that is beginning to be at the forefront of what the internet is."

Julie Bennett, 35, Fine Art, Kensington and Chelsea College

"It's a unique opportunity to have your work viewed by thousands of people worldwide who are serious about art. Being able to view works of your contemporaries around the world is a valuable source as a student so you can start to see the trends that are happening today. You can also contact everyone on the site and ask how they did something or, indeed, commission them to do something similar for you, giving you a feeling of supporting art at the very beginning."

Ian Larson, 25, BA school, The Slade School of Fine Art

"I believe that having a place to exhibit your art to as many people as possible for free is great and in that way the Stuart site has started something for a lot of artists, galleries and collectors to think about and view."

Stefanie Kirlew, 23, BA Fine Art/History of Art, Goldsmiths College

"Stuart is a fantastic networking tool for all art students. It provides an excellent opportunity to meet, share ideas, and chat with others who foster similar interests, as well as providing a space to display your work that is viewed by millions of people all over the globe each day."

Stuart Hartley, 36, MA Fine Art, The Slade School of Fine Art

"What the site gives is the opportunity to have a web presence for free (important student factor), and in turn this gives the opportunity for my work to be seen by both prospective galleries and collectors alike. It also allows me to see work by other up-and-coming artists from institutions worldwide and to contact them about their work to discuss shared concerns."