2001年12月3日 星期一

Saatchi's modern art donated to hospitals

By Matthew Beard
Monday, 3 December 2001

The advertising tycoon Charles Saatchi has donated modern art worth about £1.25m to NHS hospitals.

The advertising tycoon Charles Saatchi has donated modern art worth about £1.25m to NHS hospitals.

The works include Hymn, a 20ft-high sculpture by Damien Hirst, which shows the inner workings of the human body as depicted by a plastic toy.

Saatchi has offered the sculpture to the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, where it is expected to be installed in the atrium, provided it is deemed not distressing for the patients.

Saatchi's gifts also include 50 paintings by artists including Simon Callery, David Combs and Nicholas May. In addition, Stephen Murphy's Rabbit shows a furry animal whose smiling eyes belong to the artist. Ointment by Robert Wilson is a still life of sausage, egg, mushrooms and baked beans

However, about 10 works have been rejected because they have been seen as inappropriate for display in a hospital. They include Carina Weidle's Olympic Chickens, a sequence showing chickens whose heads have been severed, and a Combs abstract of a naked woman.

The charity Paintings in Hospitals, which has distributed individual works given by the artists John Piper, John Bratby and Carel Weight, stressed that the art had to be "right for the healthcare environment".

Initial findings from a survey of patients at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital indicated that visual and performing arts reduced anxiety levels. But experts said yesterday that there was no proven therapeutic effect from looking at art.

2001年12月2日 星期日

Charles Saatchi: Arty Saatchi

Charles is the one who causes a sensation every time he opens his wallet in an art gallery. His latest wheeze: create a museum dedicated to his private collection and designed to take Nicholas Serota and Tate Modern down a peg or two

By Cole Moreton
Sunday, 2 December 2001

The story reads like a comedy script. Two young Jewish immigrants are eager to make their fortunes in the advertising industry, circa 1970. They have a lot of ideas but not much else. A very important potential client is on his way over to see the office of the dynamic new company they have pitched to him. Unfortunately the office is bare. The brothers have had no work, so they have no staff.

Then Charles, the elder of the two, has a brainwave. He goes out on the streets of London, cash in hand, searching for people who might pass for thrusting young advertising executives. Before long a dozen or so hired strangers are pretending to be busy at their desks while Charles and Maurice Saatchi charm their client into signing a contract.

Apocryphal or not, the story is still told 30 years later because it contains a truth about Charles Saatchi. He is a showman, a master of illusion, whose great trick is to manufacture desire – to make things appear bigger, more important, more attractive, more desirable than they are.

"I think of him as the Wizard of Oz," says Charlotte Mullins, editor of Art Review magazine. "He has created this vast and impressive empire, but in the middle of it all, behind the scenes, is just this one small man working away. He sets off all the hyperbole and lets that do the work while he stays hidden."

Saatchi likes to spend his £120m fortune on art. He is often seen strolling through degree shows and in private galleries, talking to artists and curators. Although usually unannounced, his presence soon becomes known. "A buzz goes around the room when Saatchi arrives," says Mullins. "People know he can make them."

Lately, the collector and dealer has been in negotiations with English Heritage to open a new exhibition space for his unrivalled private collection. He has at least 2,500 pieces by 350 artists and wants to show them in the debating chamber of the former Greater London Council building, County Hall, in south London. Such a bold venture will need all the publicity it can get, which may explain the sudden flurry of hyperbolic media talk about the "struggle for supremacy between the two titans of British art". These stories, wherever they come from, depend on the idea that Saatchi is involved in a venomous rivalry with Sir Nicholas Serota, the curator of Tate Modern, which is a short walk along the river from County Hall.

In 1997 Saatchi took over the Royal Academy to show off his collection under the title "Sensation". More than 300,000 people came to see it. Suddenly the nature of art was a talking-point again. Was a portrait of Myra Hindley made from children's handprints good art, bad art or art at all? Was an unmade bed strewn with soiled knickers? Was a sheep in formaldehyde?

Three years later, Tate Modern was opened by the Queen. It was hugely popular with the public and regarded as one of the best art galleries in the world. There was, however, very little Britart in it because Saatchi owns the biggest and best works by Damien Hirst, Rachel Whiteread, Chris Ofili, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Sarah Lucas and Tracey Emin. He had bought everything they had done very early in their careers and driven up the prices by helping to market these Young British Artists. Tate Modern hoped Saatchi might lend or donate some of these works. He announced his own new museum instead.

Feuds make good newspaper stories, of course, but they get in the way of making money, as the Saatchis know well. They were involved in three successful Conservative Party electoral campaigns and masterminded the "Labour isn't working" ad – one of the classics of political advertising. Maurice Saatchi is a Tory peer. Charles is discreet about his politics these days, but he has been more influential than ever under Labour.

"As the Medicis were well aware, art is a great image-enhancer," says Louisa Buck, author of Moving Targets 2: a User's Guide to British Art Now. "The Catholic Church was quick to forgive the banking dynasty the sin of usury, just as the contemporary art world tends not to be too picky about the politics of those who patronise it."

Not that Saatchi is short of critics. When he gave 100 works to the Arts Council, people said it was because he had run out of storage space. When he funded bursaries and commissions for students at four London art schools, they said it was a way of getting new work on the cheap.

Saatchi is thick-skinned. A former bridge partner was impressed by his daring but not his manners. "He's a monster. Charles is brilliant at games of any kind, but he is also demanding, tetchy, intolerant and petulant while he's playing. He holds court and takes over the table, yet he has no obvious charm. This is a man who requires adoration. But he comes across as cocky, smug and irritable."

Charles Saatchi was born in Baghdad, Iraq, 58 years ago but came to Britain with his family in 1947. Maurice was the business manager and Charles the creative mind. His gift for the striking visual image was shown by their campaign for Silk Cut cigarettes, which circumvented advertising restrictions by showing nothing more than a slashed piece of purple silk. By 1986 Saatchi & Saatchi was the biggest advertising agency in the world, but Charles and Maurice left in 1994, after a revolt by shareholders, and formed a rival agency, M&C Saatchi.

Charles was divorced from his first wife, Doris, after 14 years. He proposed to Kay Hartenstein, an art dealer, two days after they met at a gallery. They married in 1990 and had a daughter, Phoebe. The couple were divorced last August on the grounds of his "unreasonable behaviour".

Saatchi has developed a deep friendship, perhaps more, with Nigella Lawson, widow of his friend John Diamond. Lawson has described Saatchi as "a very good friend" and chosen not to comment on reports she is about to move into his home in Belgravia, although she spends much of her time there. "Some people see me as a tragic heroine and that's what makes me acceptable to them," she has said. "The idea that I might be happy is unforgivable. Well, I'm sorry. It's better to be happy."

Saatchi may well be sharing in that happiness, but there are those who say he has lost his touch when it comes to art. Nothing he has done lately rivals Sensation, and his attempts at branding new groups of artists with names such as the Neurotic Realists have been unsuccessful.

There is evidence, too, that some young artists do not want to sell to him. However big their student overdraft, they prefer not to accept Hirst's assertion that "art is about life and the art world is about money". The problem, as they see it, is that because Saatchi buys in bulk he also sells a lot. Some dealers and collectors still take the view that if he's selling everything by a particular artist it's not worth buying. That can ruin careers before they have even begun.

"He used to be seen as the hand of God," says Ms Mullins. "Now artists are increasingly refusing to believe in him." The wizard will need to weave some new spells to keep the magic going.

2001年9月8日 星期六

Business high-flyer quits from top job at the British Museum after just two years

By David Lister
Saturday, 8 September 2001

Suzanna Taverne, the former investment banker appointed two years ago to reorganise the British Museum, yesterday quit as the managing director, just days before the £120,000 top job at the museum was to be advertised.

Suzanna Taverne, the former investment banker appointed two years ago to reorganise the British Museum, quit yesterday as managing director only days before the £120,000 top job at the museum was to be advertised.

Ms Taverne has been running the museum in tandem with Robert Anderson, who was the sole director before she arrived. The combination of a traditional curator figure, Mr Anderson, and a City figure, Ms Taverne, was heralded as the future for Britain's national museums and galleries.

An ambitious high-flyer and the daughter of the former Labour MP Dick Taverne, she was head-hunted from the Pearson media group to become the first person in the history of the British Museum to hold such a senior post with no museum experience. Before joining Pearson she was at the heart of the coup that ousted the Saatchi brothers from their own advertising empire. She had also worked for the investment bankers Warburg, and was former finance director of The Independent.

The appointment of Ms Taverne came after the 1996 Edwards report, which criticised the museum's management and noted the institution did not employ an accountant. A finance director was appointed and plans were drawn up to appoint a managing director with business sense.

But earlier this year Ms Taverne let it be known she wanted to run the institution singlehandedly when Mr Anderson retired next year.

She has been told the job will not be hers. The trustees are unwilling to entrust the world's most celebrated museum to someone with no curatorial background, whatever her financial acumen. Sources at the museum say the trustees were also unhappy that Ms Taverne had been so transpar-ent in making clear she hoped to be offered the job.

The fact that the trustees are advertising the job in The Economist shows they may still be placing as high a priority on the winning applicant's ability to keep finances in order as on curatorial and museum experience. What is clear is that they have abandoned the experiment of two people running the institution. The advert will be for one person with "academic and managerial experience".

Sir John Boyd was elected chairman-designate of the museum's board of trustees so he could chair the search committee before taking over from Graham Greene as chairman next July. Sir John said: "The trustees are seeking a director who combines cultural authority and managerial capability. We want strong and active leadership together with strategic vision."

2001年8月18日 星期六

High Art Lite, by Julian Stallabrass

By Boyd Tonkin
Saturday, 18 August 2001

Sick of Tracey, Damien, Gilbert & George, Jake'n'Dinos, and all the usual Saatchi-Turner art tarts? This swingeing, eloquent assault on the BritArt circus will delight lefties rather than fogeys (and Sewells). For it locates the shame of this amply-funded gang in the dehumanising market forces that made them, not in their Sensation-seeking style. Stallabrass recalls the John Berger of the 1970s as he thunders that "it becomes increasingly difficult to criticise art because that amounts to criticising business".

2001年8月13日 星期一

Hirst accuses his benefactor Saatchi of recognising art 'only with his wallet'

By Harvey McGavin
Monday, 13 August 2001

Damien Hirst, the man who scandalised the art establishment by exhibiting animal carcasses, has turned his predatory instincts on the hand that has fed him a fortune by launching an outspoken attack on Brit Art's biggest private collector, Charles Saatchi.

Damien Hirst, the man who scandalised the art establishment by exhibiting animal carcasses, has turned his predatory instincts on the hand that has fed him a fortune by launching an outspoken attack on Brit Art's biggest private collector, Charles Saatchi.

Mr Saatchi – who with his brother Maurice led the most successful advertising agency of the Eighties – has spent most of the subsequent decade spending millions of pounds on the work of young British Artists such as Hirst, Tracey Emin and Sarah Lucas.

Mr Saatchi commissioned Hirst's shark floating in formaldehyde, which was shortlisted for the Turner Prize, and last year he paid £1m for Hymn, an outsize bronze statue of the human form.

But, having grown rich on Mr Saatchi's patronage, Hirst now seems to have tired of the businessman's influence, saying he "only recognises art with his wallet" and accusing him of trying to control the art market. "Art's dragging him around on a leash and he doesn't know it. Or maybe he does know it. But there's no way he'll stop. He loves it, so he wants to possess it," Hirst says in an interview.

Hirst admits that Mr Saatchi has been "generous to artists" but calls him an "arrogant" and "childish" businessman "addicted to shopping". In interviews with the author Gordon Burn, due to be published in October, he says: "I grew up in a world where Charles Saatchi believed he could affect art values with buying power. He still believes he can do it."

Karen Wright, editor of Modern Painters, defended the role of Mr Saatchi yesterday. She insisted the patron, whose new gallery in Shoreditch, east London will be devoted to the work of Young British Artists, was a benign influence on the art world. "He's a very good thing for the arts. There are always going to be people who support art and put their money where their mouth is – it's a historical phenomenon."

Emin said more people should follow Mr Saatchi's example. "We should have more people like him and then Charles wouldn't have such a strong influence on the market. At the end of the day he's an art collector, not an arms dealer."

2001年6月24日 星期日

Portrait of a curator as a reviled man

There's turmoil in the galleries again and Nicholas Serota is in the firing line

Sarah Jane Checkland
Sunday, 24 June 2001

There's nothing we British like more than a good row among artists. It has always been the establishment versus the new.

There's nothing we British like more than a good row among artists. There was the so-called Art Quake of 1910, when The Times denounced the first exhibition of Post-Impressionism as "degenerate" and "the rejection of all that civilization has done". Then in 1935 Kenneth Clark, director of the National Gallery, claimed Ben Nicholson's abstract reliefs had contracted "spiritual beri-beri" due to their "fatal defect of purity". It has always been the establishment versus the new.

But last week was different. Not only was the art establishment under attack for its keen espousal of avant-garde conceptual art, but the attacker-in-chief was a traditional figurative artist, complaining of the establishment's partiality. Stuart Pearson Wright, who won the £25,000 first prize at the National Portrait Gallery's BP Portrait Awards for The Six Presidents of the Royal Academy, a group portrait which features suited academics contemplating their mortality, symbolised by a dead chicken, used the occasion to proclaim that Sir Nicholas Serota, director of the Tate Gallery, should be sacked.

His misdemeanour? According to 25-year-old Pearson Wright, he is chief among the villainous members of the arts establishment who ignore young figurative artists and force them to choose between abandoning painting or surviving by "taking day jobs in Burger King".

"If such huge sums of public money are involved, this seems wrong and the public should have more of a say," said Pearson Wright. "I am going to do all I can to change this, and sacking Serota would be a step in the right direction."

Pearson Wright's view echoes those of the Stuckists, a group of painters who post regular manifestos complaining about the art establishment on the internet, and whose leader, Charles Thomson, stood unsuccessfully against the former Secretary of State for Culture, Chris Smith, at the general election.

But as the Stuckists' work is widely considered banal and naive, and their complaints hysterical, they tend to be dismissed as the lunatic fringe. What really made a difference last week was not only Pearson Wright's new-found credibility, but that his attack came shortly after that of the playwright Tom Stoppard. He too questioned the new orthodoxy in his recent speech at the Royal Academy dinner. Then on Wednesday, the spotlight fell again on Nicholas Serota, when the director of Tate Modern, Lars Nittve, resigned, allegedly due to clashes with Serota about the vision for the galleries.

Serota's position at the Tate gives him unsurpassed influence in the contemporary art world. Through gallery acquisitions and his opinions, he can make or break a career. But there is one man who comes a close second: Charles Saatchi, the advertising tycoon and art collector. Together they have embraced "cutting edge" art and their patronage has made its leading players among the most courted figures in the arts today. Artists such as Damien Hirst, Rachel Whiteread and Tracey Emin are celebrities. The Turner Prize secures almost as many column inches as the Booker.

As Saatchi is the Greta Garbo of the art world, and Sir Nicholas Serota was out of the country last week, it was left to Sandy Nairne, director of national and international programmes at the Tate, and Norman Rosenthal, exhibitions secretary at the Royal Academy, to defend the establishment corner. Not only was the controversy "a load of utter bullshit", said Rosenthal, but it needed to be "nipped in the bud". All too many "things made in the name of art", he said, "are kitsch". The job of critics and curators was telling the difference. This, he said, he and his colleagues did "with great responsibility, through an international perspective, not a Little Englander one. It is not possible to paint like Turner these days. Indeed, it wasn't possible for Turner to paint like Titian. Art is about new territory."

Only Charles Saumarez Smith, director of the National Portrait Gallery, where the BP Portrait is hung each year, conceded that there was an argument for change. "For an unusually long period of time the art world has been dominated by one particular brand of practice," he said. "As a result there is a danger of this becoming the new orthodoxy." The fact that visitor numbers to the Portrait Award have doubled as a result of the row, he says, proves that "more people are interested in painting than in cutting edge art".

He points to a whole tranch of 20th-century figurative artists who were once dismissed as "oddball" but are now "seen to be fantastically dominant". The list is headed by Stanley Spencer, whose exhibition at Tate Britain closes this evening, having attracted around 90.000 visitors.

What of the painters themselves? Charles Thomson of the Stuckists heartily applauded Pearson Wright for "his courage" in joining the crusade against "the cul de sac of idiocy generated by the Serota-Saatchi axis". But the most eloquent – and influential – advocate for change was perhaps the Glasgow-based former war artist to Bosnia, Peter Howson. "Art has rules," says the 43-year-old painter. "If you break them, you are on to a false trail."

2001年5月16日 星期三

Saatchi to launch gallery for next wave of Britart

Charles Saatchi finds space to show off his signings

By Louise Jury, Media Correspondent
Wednesday, 16 May 2001

Charles Saatchi, the multimillionaire art collector and benefactor who has become Britain's leading patron of young talent, is to provide a new venue for cutting-edge works.

Charles Saatchi, the multimillionaire art collector and benefactor who has become Britain's leading patron of young talent, is to provide a new venue for cutting-edge works.

The advertising executive whose gallery in north London has helped to launch the careers of many modern artists is to open a second exhibition space to promote the students he has been supporting through college.

The new venue in Shore-ditch, east London, will be close to the premises of the influential dealers Jay Jopling and Victoria Miro, who both recently set up shop in the area.

Charlotte Mullins, the editor of Art Review magazine, which is to give details of the move next week, said: "It's almost like an authoritative stamp on the area, but it's also as if he feels he had better get in on the act. The fact that this is near Jay Jopling and Victoria Miro has not been lost on anybody.

"But picking up artists has always been his thing and he's been doing it earlier and earlier. Showing artists this way is just a bit more funky, a bit more hip."

Mr Saatchi founded bursaries for students at a number of London art colleges two years ago, including Goldsmiths', the Alma Mater of Damien Hirst, and the Royal College, which boasts Tracey Emin as an old girl, with proceeds from the £1.6m sale of works from his collection.

The students were eager to exhibit, and Mr Saatchi seized an opportunity to take over an existing space, the Underwood Street Gallery in Shoreditch, to show their work. The exhibition is expected to open on 5 June.

The move has proved a lifeline for a young dealer, Simon Hedges, who had been running the gallery until it was threatened with being sold last year.

The gallery is in a building leased from a charity. With developers taking over many of the poorer parts of London inhabited by artists, the charity looked likely to put its interests first and sell. A deal that would have seen the end of the gallery fell through at the last minute last year. But it left Mr Hedges without a settled programme of exhibitions and he decided to approach Charles Saatchi.

"He has always lent us great support," Mr Hedges told the Art Review. "He has come to all the shows, he's brought interesting people down and he's bought work from us."

Talks are still in progress about how the arrangement will work. The first exhibition was due to open next week but has been delayed to June. After the showcase of college students, it is thought that the gallery will offer space for artists in the Saatchi collection to exhibit new work.

Ms Mullins said: "The Underwood Street Gallery has always had a good reputation. This is a benevolent move, but you wonder whether he would have done it if the gallery had been in W12."

Charles Saatchi has long been a controversial figure in the contemporary art market, but his eye for spotting new talent has made him the envy of rivals. He has championed the careers of artists including the group known as the Young British Artists, headed by Damien Hirst, and highlights of his collection were shown to widespread acclaim at the Royal Academy in its controversial "Sensation" show.

But he has also been accused of distorting the market with his prolific purchases. Even the decision to create the bursaries was met with cynicism, with critics pointing out that a comparatively small part of the £1.6m proceeds from his auction at Christie's in 1999 had gone towards this act of philanthropy. The art colleges each received £10,000 a year for their bursaries. Simon Hedges is delighted that Charles Saatchi has stepped in and enabled them to continue to operate. "We were one of the original sites in Shoreditch, yet now we're a lifeboat for what used to be important here.

"We have become isolated as an independent, non- commercial space and it came to the point where we needed support."