THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLE MAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ AND VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace 13th - 20th, October 2010 PRESS CLIPPING INTERNET 1 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028281
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) DAZED DIGITAL http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/8775/1/the-house-of-the-nobleman Arts & Culture The House Of The Nobleman Old Masters are hung in the company of some of the most notorious contemporary artists on the block in a show opposite Frieze Art Fair Text by John-Paul Pryor For what is a man profited, if he gains the whole world and loses his own soul? Perhaps this is one question that could be asked of any billionaire art collector. In The House of The Nobleman, artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz examines our relationship to art and the role of the supposedly worldly or noble collector from a non- judgemental critical distance, and exhibits art both old and new (from Manet and Cézanne to The Chapmans and Damien Hirst) in a show that promises to prove contentious. Here, Lenkiewicz's own "resequenced" Picassos will be exhibited against their original counterparts, effectively folding art history in upon itself to create an entirely new kind of dialogue. Dazed Digital went down to his studio to talk nobility, history and the reasons why a lost battle is a battle one thinks one has lost. Dazed Digital: What is the concept that informs The House Of The Nobleman? Wolfe von Lenkiewicz: When I started to plan the exhibition with the co-curator Victoria Golembiovskaya (by whom I was fascinated because she was instrumental in manoeuvring a submarine in the grand canal in Venice), I began to think about the notion of quality in the 21st century as opposed to the set of values pursued by Marsilio Ficino. The dislocation and decertification of a stable position in the world, which was formally the aristocrat, the king... the noble man. The artist, being perceived at the centre, was seen as a God, and within Ptolemaic concentric rings one moved from dog, to angel, to God. This is a hierarchical linear model, which has been attractive for five centuries in one form or another. The idea of this show is to explore a post-humanist form of compassion - the world is dynamically changing, and no matter how flexible our map may be to quantify it, we will be in an eternal struggle with meaning. 2 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028282
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Royal Academy of Arts http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/ra-magazine/blog/the-house-of-the-nobleman,61,BAR.html The House of the Nobleman Posted: 14 October 2010 by Sarah Greenberg, RA Magazine Editor Most people selling a property try to make it seem welcoming by brewing coffee and - at a stretch - baking bread. But in a world gone mad for property and art, the stakes have been raised. How about a house that's been 'staged' (as they say Stateside) with a built-in art collection, including an eclectic array of work from Picasso to Grayson Perry, Rodin to Richter, Manet to, predictably, Murakami, the artist who famously emblazoned his designs on Louis Vuitton bags. Yes, the £29m budget is a bit steep, but it needn't put you of from booking a tour to see this renovated mansion in Cornwall Terrace that has been curated by Victoria Golemblovskaya and artist Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz, with the participation of the Saatchi Collection and Channel 4. Exhibition open until 20 October, 11am - 6pm, by appointment only www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse Boswall House Map here 2 Cornwall Terrace Regent's Park London NW1 4QP 3 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028283
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Tume Out London http://www.timeout.com/london/art/event/203383/the-house-of-the-noble-man The House of the Noble Man This event has now finished Until Wed Oct 20 Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, London, NW1 Full details & map Time Out says Old Masters and famous names from contemporary art, including Picasso, Manet, Cézanne, Damien Hirst, Banksy, Martin Kippenberger and Gerhard Richter, in a show curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya held in an eighteenth-century building close to the Frieze Art Fair. Work from the Saatchi Gallery's 'New Sensations 2010 ' exhibition of graduating students is also on show. Entry is free but by appointment only. Visit the website to book. Boswall House details 11am-6pm Mon-Sat by appointment only Address Boswall House 2 Cornwall Terrace, London, United Kingdom NW1 Transport Baker Street http://www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse 4 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028284
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) jotta http://www.jotta.com/article/events-other/1136/the-house-of-the-noble-man The House of the Noble Man 15.10.2010 2 Cornwall Terrace, a magnificent 18th-century building off Regent's Park and a stone's throw from Frieze art fair, will be the venue for this spectacular exhibition featuring Old Masters and famous names from contemporary art, including Picasso, Manet, Cézanne, Damien Hirst, Banksy, Martin Kippenberger and Gerhard Richter. Work from the Saatchi Gallery's 'New Sensations 2010 ' including jotta artist Joshua Bilton also on show. The show imagines the house's inhabitant as a hugely successful trader. Having used his mastery of technology and the possibilities of the information age to amass vast wealth, he aspires to find a shaping narrative for the etiolated form of his existence. Art is one of the avenues in his search. He may live in a nobleman's house, but he's no blue blood. A tax exile, nomadic by habit, our collector spends his days - and nights - bathed in the blue light of a computer screen, as he trades in dematerialized securities, or prices options based on weather conditions on the other side of the globe: drowned cities viewed remotely via CNN, or better, modelled via a computer simulation. The roles of the nobleman and artist found a convergence in the figure of Don Quixote, a fool who aspired to the chivalric codes he'd read about in antiquated texts. But this fantasy was a liberation; allowing him to contend with base matter, infusing it with near-infinite possibilities, just as the empirical certainties of the Renaissance would soon give way to the vertiginous perspectives of the new mathematics. The exhibition updates the Don Quixote model to cast the collector/artist/nobleman as a man without qualities, occupying the privileged space of the capitalist elite, looking down through a virtual window to plot the constantly-changing vectors of matter, bodies and events as they hurtle by on the other side of the glass. Curated by Victoria lonina-Golembiovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz Friday 15th to Wednesday the 20th October, 11 am - 6 p.m, by appointment only 2 Cornwall Terrace, The Regent's Park, London NW1 5 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028285
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) 798 http://798district.com/798/en/blog/tag/the-house-of-the-noble-man/ 6m GBP worth of Picassos to go on show during Frieze O Posted on September 14, 2010 by Cindy Van Der Rijt Four rare works by Picasso thought to be worth over f6m and an 1875 Cézanne oil on canvas will go on sale during Frieze week next month in an ambitious exhibition to be held at a London property part owned by a Russian billionaire. The show, entitled "The House of the Noble Man" (12-20 October), will open at 2 Cornwall Terrace, an 18th-century building off Regent's Park in London near to the Frieze Art Fair site. The exhibition is curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, whose works will feature in the display, and Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskaya. Around £20m worth of art will be for sale, approximately a third of the show, confirms Von Lenkiewicz. According to the co-curator, the Picasso pieces on offer will include Buste d'Homme à la Pipe (1969, priced at £30,000-£60,000 price range. Read the full article Tags: CézanneFrieze Art FairPicassoThe House of the Noble Man Category Art, Exhibitions 6 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028286
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) spoonfed http://www.spoonfed.co.uk/spooners/tom-699/editor-s-choice-exhibitions-3982/ Editor's Choice - Exhibitions 18 October, 2010 by: Tom Jeffreys Every Monday our editors bring you their personal highlights of the week ahead. Tom Jeffreys selects his top three exhibitions. Until Wednesday 20th October House of the Nobleman @ 2 Cornwall Terrace Of all the bits and bobs that crop up across the capital during Frieze week, this was one of the highlights. Victoria Golembiovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz curate an exhibition in the sumptuous splendour of 2 Cornwall Terrace. On display are paintings and sculpture by major artists fromn throughout history like Schiele, Picasso, and Manet, dotted among which are this year's Saatchi/Channel 4 New Sensations. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028287
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Evening Standard http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23888111-future-art-stars-cause-a-new-sensation.do Future art stars cause a New Sensation Louise Jury, Chief Arts Correspondent 15.10.10 Twenty artists hailed as stars of the future are getting the chance to show their work alongside that of 60 masters, from Picasso and Warhol to Manet, Rodin and Cézanne. The 20 were chosen from hundreds of graduate students in the New Sensations Prize, a contest now in its fourth year, organised by Charles Saatchi's gallery and Channel 4. Their work is part of The House of the Nobleman, an exhibition of art borrowed from international collections that is being staged in an 18th-century mansion in Cornwall Terrace, Regent's Park, a stone's throw from the Frieze Art Fair. Four of the graduates were selected to receive £1,000 bursaries to develop a project for inclusion. They are: German Pablo Wendel, 30, whose degree work involved squatting in a derelict chip shop to which he built a staircase, later dismantled by Royal College of Art staff in a health and safety row; Katie Surridge, 25, and Russian Nika Neelova, 23, both Slade School graduates, and Ross M Brown, 24, who is still studying in Dundee. One of them will be named this year's overall winner on Monday and the exhibition runs until Wednesday. Rebecca Wilson, associate director of the Saatchi Gallery, said: "The 20 shortlisted artists have created a stunning range of work, including photography, painting, installation and sculpture. The exhibition offers a wonderful opportunity to discover the bright stars of the future." More than half of the graduate artists are based in the capital. "London is still one of the best places to do a fine art degree and has that reputation across the world, as well as being one of the most vibrant centres for contemporary art," Ms Wilson added. New Sensations at the House of the Nobleman, 2 Cornwall Terrace, is open until Wednesday. 8 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028288
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Evening Standard http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23885619-how-art-can-make-greed-look-fabulous.do How art can make greed look fabulous Olivia Cole 07.10.10 Literature's most sinister art connoisseur is probably Henry James's Gilbert Osmond, the collector of beautiful objects to whom Isabel Archer shackles her fortunes in The Portrait of a Lady. She is at first dazzled by his advice that "one ought to make one's life a work of art", before realising that he has no imagination of his own, only acquisitiveness: beauty by proxy. By that time, as his wife, she is part of his collection. So how to spot a Gilbert Osmond today? You might imagine one lives in The House of the Nobleman, an exhibition opening next week in a vast Edwardian pile on the borders of Regent's Park to coincide with the nearby Frieze art fair. Surveying the J20 million-worth of paintings, from Poussin to Warhol via Picasso, visitors are invited to believe that they are in the house of an extravagantly committed collector. This imagined character is someone like Randolph Hearst in Citizen Kane: a rich man with non-existent morals but exquisite taste. Like Dick Fuld, Lehman Brothers' last CEO: earlier this month, it took Christie's days to sell off the bank's art collection. Here there is no so such owner: this collection has been curated by two artists, Victoria Golembiovskaya and the painter Wolfe von Lenkiewicz. The nobleman of their title is a modern-day Don Quixote, caught between fantasy and reality. Von Lenkiewicz says City practices such as shorting have "no direct relationship to reality". Their modern-day nobleman hankers for meaning and order: beauty even. Hence the kind of people who fervently collect in London. The compulsion to be known not only as loaded but cultured is often observed but rarely examined. It's interesting that this show is staged by artists all of whom have a complex relationship with the kind of people characterised by Vince Cable as merely "spivs and gamblers". Wolfe refers to people who do "unspeakable things" before reiterating that the show isn't a moral judgment. Even so, their show tries to lift the veil on the activity at Frieze. As a centre for commercial art sustained still by swilling disposable income, London eclipses Paris and New York. Frieze will be swarming with both people like me, who go to look, and hundreds of the modern-day "noblemen" with their Black Amex cards. It's no small irony that The House of the Nobleman naturally has its own massively wealthy backer, Russian property giant Mirax. Greed might not be good but it sure can look fabulous. And what about the savvier artists? Tracey Emin whines about arts cuts yet moans about her tax bill. Damien Hirst has exploited the market in his own work as ruthlessly as any hedge-funder. Wolfe himself confidently discusses algorithms and is a favourite of collectors such as Bono and Richard Devereux, co-founder of Virgin. London's most successful artists aren't exactly in the gutter, looking at the stars. 9 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028289
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) THE ART NEWSPAPER http://www.theartnewspaper.com/articles/£6m-worth-of-Picassos-to-go-on-show-during-Frieze/21495 £6m worth of Picassos to go on show during Frieze The exhibition, to be held in a property co-owned by a Russian billionaire, also includes works by Warhol, Hirst, Richter and Saatchi's "New Sensations" By Gareth Harris | Web only Published online 9 Sep 10 (News) 27.2,6% Four rare works by Picasso thought to be worth over £6m and an 1875 Cézanne oil on canvas will go on sale during Frieze week next month in an ambitious exhibition to be held at a London property part owned by a Russian billionaire. The show, entitled "The House of the Noble Man" (12-20 October), will open at 2 Cornwall Terrace, an 18th-century building off Regent's Park in London near to the Frieze Art Fair site. The exhibition is curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, whose works will feature in the display, and Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskaya. Around £20m worth of art will be for sale, approximately a third of the show, confirms Von Lenkiewicz. According to the co-curator, the Picasso pieces on offer will include Buste d'Homme à la Pipe (1969, priced at £3m); the 1905 drawing The Family of Saltimbanques and a cubist painting, Nature Morte au Gobelet (around 1914). An 1875 oil on canvas by Cézanne, Don Quixote, is priced at £1.25m. Works by Yves Klein, Egon Schiele, Gerhard Richter, Damien Hirst and Andy Warhol will also be for sale. Von Lenkiewicz's own works will be in the £30,000-£60,000 price range. "The Picassos etc. are from anonymous dealers who will take their portion of the percentages. Any other proceeds made during the show will go back into the funding of the exhibition which is hugely expensive despite its sponsorship [by the Russian real estate company Mirax]," adds Von Lenkiewicz. A selection of works from Charles Saatchi's "New Sensations 2010" roster of emerging artists will also be for sale. Twenty students shortlisted for the prize, which is sponsored by Cadogan Tate, have been chosen to present their work; these artists include Matthew Welch, Katie Sims and Pablo Wendel. A non-selling section will include works from the London-based Zabludowicz Collection and the holdings of the Iraqi-born industrialist Ragdan El-akabi. "The show came about when I was in Moscow exhibiting my work at Triumph Gallery. Victoria took me to the Mirax city project, a huge development in central Moscow. She talked to Sergei Polonsky [head of Mirax] about the Cornwall Terrace buildings which he has shares in. He was willing to sponsor the show," says Von Lenkiewicz. The Mirax group are co-developers of the Cornwall Terrace historical complex, parts of which are up for sale. 10 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028290
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) FOLD GALLERY http://www.foldgallery.com/cgi-bin/mail.cgi/archive/fold/20101011025541/ PHYSICAL PAINTING REMINDER Simon Callery Fold Gallery London would like to invite you to the Physical Painting private view this Tuesday evening. The gallery will be running special extended opening hours this week, we will be opening Wednesday 13th to Sunday 17th from 12 - 6pm. To coincide with the show at Fold Gallery one of Callery's large-scale paintings will also be on display in The House Of The Nobleman exhibition. Located at 2 Cornwall Terrace in Regents Park and just across from Frieze Art Fair, this show includes works by Picasso, Poussin and Cezanne. For press on 'The House Of The Nobleman' Exhibition see below link http://www.theartnewspaper.com/articles/%C2%A36m-worth-of-Picassos-to-go-on-show-during-Frieze/21495 To book a viewing for 'The House Of The Nobleman' Exhibition see below link http://www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse/ HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028291
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) FT .com FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/e8bd5dOc-d4d5-11df-b230-00144feabdc0.html Elsewhere in London: what's on and what to see Published: October 13 2010 01:20 | Last updated: October 13 2010 01:20 With the absence of Zoo, the Pavilion of Art & Design (PAD) (until October 17; www.padlondon.net) will this year play second fiddle to Frieze. This sophisticated fair of modern and contemporary art, design, photography and tribal art from 1860 was conceived by Patrick Perrin and Stéphane Custot and is now in its fourth year. PAD has retained its place in Berkeley Square, a site that offers limited space expansion, but a sought-after Mayfair address. As auction houses all jostle to cash in on the festival spirit, Christie's is launching an initiative entitled Multiplied (October 15-18; www.multipliedartfair.com) at its South Kensington saleroom. The focus of this fair is contemporary art editions - photographs, prints, artists' books and 3D multiples - and there will be big names, including John Baldessari, Mat Collishaw and Gerald Laing, on sale for small prices. Another example of canny innovation - or outsiders crashing the party - is House of the Nobleman at 2 Cornwall Terrace (October 15-20; www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse). This is a property viewing with a difference: not only is the house itself on the market, but so is much of the art - including works by Pablo Picasso, Helen Chadwick and Grayson Perry - that decorates its interior. While the majority of Frieze Week events take place in grandiose settings in London's West End, a couple of contrasting fairs are capitalising on sites in the city's East End. The Future Can Wait (until October 17; www.thefuturecanwait.com), an alternative fair started by trusted talent-spotters Zavier Ellis and Simon Rumley, returns to Shoreditch Town Hall for the fourth year running. 12 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028292
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) artnet http://www.artnet.com/magazineus/news/artnetnews/frieze-week-preview10-8-10.asp HERE COMES FRIEZE WEEK Oct. 8, 2010 Here it comes. Next week, Oct. 14-17, 2010, is London's time to shine like the diamond it is in the international art-market sun, as Frieze Week bows in the British super-city. With dozens of events and most of the best galleries making the trip, the whole thing is exhausting just to think about. Here, then, a quick-and-dirty summary of some of the highlights. We're sure we've missed a few, but this'll do to start: FRIEZE Of course the centerpiece, as usual, is the Frieze Art Fair itself, going up in Regent's Park. The selection is top- notch, with some 173 exhibitors on board, including most of the top dealers you'd expect. MORE, MORE, MORE Much more is going on, including big events like the launch of Ai Weiwei's Turbine Hall installation at Tate Modern. We, however, prefer to focus on some of the freakier offerings. Or what about the The Museum of Everything in Primrose Hill, which was "regarded as the most successful new addition to the Frieze scene last year" (according to the Independent). For the third exhibition at the space, opening Oct. 13, Pop art pioneer Peter Blake curates a show of "outsider" art and artifacts, including pieces by Morton Bartlett, James Castle, Henry Darger and Martin Ramirez. During Frieze Week, contemporary art stars like Bob & Roberta Smith, Polly Morgan and Jeremy Deller are scheduled for various tours and talks at the Museum. Worth a swing by. 27.2.69 Then there is the mysterious House of the Noble Man, Oct. 12-20, at 2 Cornwall Terrace, an 18th-century building off Regent's Park, near Frieze. What exactly this show is remains unclear, but it is some kind of conceptual selling exhibition, sponsored by the Russian billionaire who owns the property, and curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz with Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskaya. Lenkiewicz, for his part, describes it as "a curatorial concept playing with the idea of commerce, mirroring the [art] market with irony." The Art Newspaper reports that some £20-million in art will be for sale, including works by Picasso and Cézanne, as well as a selection of works from Charles Saatchi's "New Sensations 2010" roster of emerging artists, and the holdings of the Iraqi-born industrialist Ragdan El-akabi. 13 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028293
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) artnet® http://www.artnet.com/magazineus/reviews/jones/frieze-art-week10-22-10.asp LONDON DISPATCH by Laura K. Jones Powerless against the magnetic force towing them in to the bowels of Regent's Park, 60,000 visitors to the eighth edition of the Frieze Art Fair were faced with a decision. What to buy from an array of works whose combined price came to $365 million? Would it be The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths, a sprawling Damien Hirst cabinet containing a school of pickled fish, priced at $5.6 million? The huge work turned out to be the star sale of the fair, as was widely reported, when it was flogged immediately from the White Cube stand during the Frieze preview. Apparently, the cynical press refers to the vernissage as "Billionaires Day," and indeed, attendees included Claudia Schiffer, Charles Saatchi, Steve Cohen (a first timer to the fair) and Dasha Zhukova. So powerful has Frieze become that commercial galleries, public spaces and auction houses now tie their activities to it more than ever. Off-site auctions saw Phillips de Pury selling David Hockney's Autumn Pool for $2 million and Christie's flogging Andreas Gursky's photograph of the New York Stock Exchange for $700,000, almost three times its estimate. Harry Blain and Graham Southern, former directors of Haunch of Venison, inaugurated their new gallery, BlainSouthern, with "Creation Condemned," a hypnotic and troubling show by Mat Collishaw of images of pole dancers, frenzied burning butterflies and the great ravines that were left when the Taliban destroyed the Bamiyan Buddhas. Fusing symbols of decadence and decay, Collishaw makes lithophanes -- in this case, images etched in thin, translucent Corian, lit from behind with slowly pulsating lights. Blain and Southern afterwards invited the art world to the Ivy Club until the early hours of the next morning. Then, it was onwards and upwards to "The House of the Noble Man," a super-slick exhibition in an 18th-century Cornwall Terrace townhouse near to the Frieze site (an address, according to the Art Newspaper, thought to be being prepped for sale to former U.S. president Bill Clinton) that was co-curated by polymath artist Wolfe Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. The show felt like serious money, including as it did Andy Warhol works I'd never even seen images of before, plus things by Poussin, Manet, Cézanne, Picasso, Hirst and Kippenberger. Over its five floors, "Noble Man" also housed work from the Saatchi Gallery's "New Sensations 2010" exhibition of graduating students. Stand-out pieces included So Over, a room full of animal hides by Kate Surridge, a sculpture student at Slade School, and / Used to Think, an exceptional cautionary film about the bleeding-eyed X Factor generation by a man called Lee Holden. Amazingly sinister, the slo-mo montage included images of Britney Spears, a live lobotomy, a childlike Japanese robot and a woman suffering paranoid delusions, all to a haunting soundtrack of modern music and computer sounds. 14 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028294
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) ArtLy st http://www.artlyst.com/articles/top-10-frieze-week-art-events Top 10 Frieze Week Art Events This is the ArtLyst top 10 list of events and exhibitions in and around London during Frieze week. The corridor is jam packed with exciting things to experience and see before the phenomenon finishes on the 17 October. Frieze costs around €30 but many of the other events are actually Free ! Frieze Art Fair 14 - 17 October features over 150 of the most exciting contemporary art galleries in the world. The fair also includes specially commissioned artists' projects, a prestigious talks programme and an artist-led education schedule. Around £30 for a one day pass. Fair Information Ai Weiwei, Tate Modern Unilever series turbine hall installation. Tate Modern London Bankside Free Vanitas - The Transience of Earthly Pleasures. The exhibition will take place in the sumptuous setting of the former Sierra Leone Embassy on 33 Great Portland Street during this year's Frieze Art Fair. The Age of the Marvellous exhibition, which attracted over 4,000 visitors during Frieze Art Fair last October was in ArtLyst's top ten exhibitions of 2009. Now All Visual Arts (AVA) has announced its upcoming fall show Vanitas: The Transience of Earthly Pleasures. Conceived and curated by Joe La Placa and Mark Sanders of AVA, the exhibition is a contemporary update on the four hundred year old theme of the Vanitas first developed in Holland and Northern Europe in the mid to late 17th century. from October the 11th until the 17th. Free House of the Noble Man, Oct. 12-20, at 2 Cornwall Terrace, an 18th-century building off Regent's Park, near Frieze. Modern Masters in opulent setting. 15 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028295
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) ARTINFO http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/36017/artinfo-uks-guide-to-frieze-week-2010/ ARTINFO UK's Guide to Frieze Week 2010 By Coline Milliard, ARTINFO UK Published: October 11, 2010 LONDON - Frieze Week is upon us! Europe's largest contemporary art fair has staked its tent in Regent's Park, bringing with it an estimated $375 million in work by brand-name artists and emerging talents alike, and London is seething with exhibitions and events to welcome the collectors, tastemakers, and various art grandees descending on the city. What to see? Where to go? ARTINFO UK has a few recommendations. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 With still two days to go before Frieze Art Fair opens to the public, today is the perfect day to indulge in a bit of London tourism, mixing in visits to the city's West End galleries. Stroll down Piccadilly and stop at Thomas Dane Gallery, on Duke Street, for the Kelley Walker exhibition. On Heddon Street - a continental oasis at the heart of Central London - Aicon Gallery has put together an excellent exhibition retracing artist and thinker Rasheed Araeen's first fifteen years of production, beginning in 1959. Two other good shows on the same street are Paola Pivi at Carlson and Jimmie Durham at Sprovieri. You can also discover Sadie Coles' new space in New Burlington Place, inaugurated with an exhibition of Urs Fisher's sculptures. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14 You've done Tate Britain, do you really need to go to Tate Modern? Of course you do. First, the newly opened Gauguin exhibition is stunning and simply impossible to miss (it has been described by the Times as "the show of the season - in fact of the whole year). Second, the new commission by Ai Weiwei, was recently unveiled in Turbine Hall. You can then head north to enjoy Fergus Henderson's English cuisine at St. John Bar & Restaurant in Smithfield, before wandering to ROKEBY for their exhibition of German-born, London- based artist Bettina Buck. Today is also a good day to see "The House of the Noble Man," an exhibition curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskayan. It includes a Cézanne, £6 million ($9.6 million) worth of Picasso, as well as pieces by Damien Hirst, Christian Boltanski, Andy Warhol, Gerhard Richter, and many more - all in the historical setting of Cornwall Terrace as it overlooks Regent's Park. (This event is by appointment only at Boswell House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, Regents Park, London NW1. To arrange a visit, register at: http://www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse/). 16 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028296
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) GAU PASE PaulFraser Collectibles http://www.paulfrasercollectibles.com/section.asp?docid=4519&catid=26 Rare Picasso works worth over f6m to be sold in October auction alongside Hirst and Warhol Four pieces by the Cubist painter go on sale next month and could see record prices Regent's Park in London is set to be the home of four very special artworks by the world renowned Spanish artist Pablo Picasso. The works, believed to worth over £6m ($9.3m) will be exhibited as part of a show called "The House of the Noble Man" which is running from October 12 to 20 at 2 Cornwall Terrace in Regents park, London. The works will go on sale alongside an 1875 Cézanne oil on canvas work, during Frieze week. According to the co-curator of the exhibit, the four Picasso works on offer will include a 1905 drawing entitled "The Family of Saltimbanques" ', a 1914 Cubist painting titled "Nature Morte au Gobelet" and the 1969 piece "Buste d'Hommeà la Pipe" which is currently price at €3m ($4.6). In addition to this the exhibit will have works by Yves Klein, Gerhard Richter, Egon Schiele and the more familiar names of Andy Warhol and Damien Hirst. The Picasso works are believed to have come from anonymous dealers, whilst a selection of pieces has also come from Charles Saatchi's "New Sensations 2010" roster of emerging artists. However, for many collectors the undoubted focus of the event will be the four works by Picasso. Picasso's work is arguably some of the most valued and collectible on the market due to his position as a pioneer and co-creator of the artistic form of Cubism. There works subverted the traditional notion of painting an object, instead breaking them up and re-assembling them in a abstract work to create an ambiguous and thought provoking piece of art. 17 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028297
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) BAVAAR http://www.harpersbazaar.co.uk/fashion/blog/the-editors/house-of-noble-man House of Noble Man Oct 18, 2010 04:06:00 PM by Sarah Bailey I love the extraordinary and intriguing exhibitions which one encounters around the edges of Frieze. 2009's The Age of the Marvellous at One Marylebone (curated by AVA) was one such discovery - dark and theatrical - which stayed with me all year... This year's House of Noble Man (a collaboration between the Saatchi Gallery and Channel 4's New Sensations), is another spectacular show of a very different flavour mounted in No. 2 Cornwall Terrace, a gleaming showcase of super-prime real-estate. (I attended on the opening night and was treated to a tour of two other oligarch-ready show mansions at No.6 and 11 Cornwall Terrace, by a dashing Knight Frank estate agent by the name of Darren Daggers... Quite surreal, but, of course, an incredibly resonant statement about the current art market). Back at No. 2 Cornwall Terrace, House of Noble Man curated by Victoria Golembiovskaya and artist-of-the- moment Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz mixes work from the giants of modern art - Cezanne and Picasso - with some dazzling and provocative contemporary pieces plus, of course, Channel 4's New Sensations discoveries. I loved the filigree Cement Truck sculpture by Wim Delvoye (the Belgian conceptual artist probably best-known for his work in the 90s involving the tattooing of live pigs), Rachel Whiteread's dolls house chess set and New Sensation Elizabeth Jordan's dream-like kinetic installation, which she is showing in an upper bedroom. Of course, there's nothing like a Frieze party to lure out London's finest exhibitions and I was very pleased to meet showgoer Philip Levine, who uses his bald pate (bejeweled on this occasion as though he is wearing a Swarovski swim cap) as his canvas. His next show, he informs me, is being sponsored by Gilette... House of Noble Man is on until Wednesday October 20, so do try and see it. Entry is free, but you have to book an appointment. 2 Cornwall Terrace, London, United Kingdom, NW1, cornwallterrace.co.uk (Image: 'House of Noble Man', curated by Victoria Golembiovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz.) 18 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028298
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) THE* INDEPENDENT http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/art-in-residence-redeveloped-park-terrace-hosts-exhibit- 2102450.html Art in Residence: Redeveloped park terrace hosts exhibit By Deirdre Hipwell Sunday, 10 October 2010 Curators Victoria Golembiovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz, in collaboration with the Saatchi Gallery and Channel 4's New Sensations, will host an art exhibition starting next Sunday showcasing famous works by artists such as Paul Cezanne and Pablo Picasso. The House of the Nobleman exhibit, which coincides with the Frieze Art Fair, will be held at the mansion No 2 Cornwall Terrace in Regents Park and will include works from several international art collections. No 2 Cornwall Terrace has been extensively redeveloped by developer Oakmayne Bespoke and is part of a much larger redevelopment of Cornwall Terrace to create eight mansions. The houses are up for sale starting at €29m. 19 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028299
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) THE INDEPENDENT http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/frieze-art-fair-2010-get-ready-for-british-arts- biggest-week-2100683.html Frieze Art Fair 2010: Get ready for British art's biggest week Frieze Art Fair is back - and it's bigger than ever, with 173 international galleries. Alice Jones looks forward to this year's event and the week-long whirl of auctions, exhibitions and parties it brings to London Friday, 8 October 2010 As always, the proof will be in the purchasing, but signs that confidence has returned to the market can already be found in the buzz around the traditional run of Frieze week auctions. At Christie's, Hirst will be auctioned alongside two works by Gerhard Richter (valued at up to f1m) and, hollow laugh, Andreas Gursky's photomontage of the New York Stock Exchange, last seen hanging in the boardroom at Lehman Brothers (estimate: £100,000 - {150,000). Sotheby's has Jerry Hall's extraordinary collection up for sale - including work by Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud and Andy Warhol. And Phillips de Pury will hope to break the f1m mark with David Hockney's Autumn Pool while Maurizio Cattelan's Una Domenica a Rivara, a rope of knotted bedsheets to hang from a window, is estimated to sell at £400,000 to £600,000. Elsewhere, in a bold new addition to the landscape, £20m-worth of art will go on sale in an 18th-century mansion part-owned by the Russian real-estate billionaire Sergei Polonsky. The House of the Noble Man, a stone's throw from Frieze in Cornwall Terrace, is curated by Victoria Golembiovskaya and the artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and will include four rare Picassos and Cezanne's Don Quixote. For all of these and more, the international arterati will descend on London next week, jetting in from the traditional hot spots of New York, Berlin and Moscow, as well as from the emerging collector territories of the Middle East, India and China for what is now known simply as Frieze week. It's no longer just about the fair; a whole city's-worth of cultural activity has coalesced around those big white marquees. The breakfast views are booked in, the big museum shows are up and the parties - from a Frieze week opener at the Groucho Club to the ritzy annual Cartier dinner at Bar Boulud and ArtReview's Power 100 party at Sketch - are planned. After its initial struggles, the hype-filled boom years and fear-filled bust years, Frieze is now firmly established, an unmissable stop-off between Basel and Miami on the global art calendar. A decade ago, London didn't even have its own contemporary art fair. Now, for five days in mid- October, the art set wouldn't dream of being anywhere else. 20 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028300
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) ARTOFFICIALSPACE http://www.artofficialspace.co.uk/exhibitions.htm Exhibitions Upcoming Shows House of the Nobleman f/ Ben Grainger & Sean Penlington Friday 15th - 20th October, 2010 2 Cornwall Terrace, London, NW1 4QP www.saatchigallery.com/4newsensations Past Shows How It All Worked Out @ International 3 f/ Ben Grainger & Sean Penlington Saturday 10th - 30th July, 2010 The International 3 8 Fairfield st Manchester UK M1 3GF Opening night on the 9th @ 6:00pm 21 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028301
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Bernard Evans http://www.bernardevans.co.uk/artNews.php?nlld=2728 The Art Market: a house party 2010-Oct-11 By Georgina Adam www.google.co.uk "Frieze week" kicks off this week in London, drawing the cream of the art world to Britain's capital. It is centred of course on the fair that started it all (Frieze opens to the public in Regent's Park on Thursday), but a host of satellite events are also on offer. One of the more intriguing is taking place just down the road from the fair, at 2 Cornwall Terrace, part of an enormously expensive real estate project being developed and sold. In what appears to be a sophisticated way of selling both art and the property, the 18th-century mansion is being used as a temporary venue for an exhibition entitled The House of the Nobleman, October 15-20. The format is hybrid, both commercial and non-commercial, with 68 works on show, half of them loans from collectors - one is David Roberts, the rest are secret - the other half consisting of works of art for sale. The House of the Nobleman is curated by the artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, who has teamed up with a young Russian curator, Victoria Golembiovskaya. It is backed by Mirax, a Russian real estate company that has a "significant but minority" stake in the Cromwell Terrace complex. Mirax belongs to a Russian billionaire, Sergei Polonsky, but Mirax has been troubled since the financial recession and has a reported $120m in debt; the firm did not respond to a request for comment. The eight houses in the Cromwell Terrace complex are priced between f29m and £60m. Various dealers, from the UK and elsewhere, are contributing works of art to the show; they range from two paintings by Poussin to Picasso's "Buste d'Homme à la Pipe" (1969), priced at £3m. Banksy, Richter, Klein, Rodin, Cézanne and Warhol are the unlikely bedfellows in the show, which includes two works by Von Lenkiewicz himself (at £60,000 and £50,000) and about 22 consigned by Charles Saatchi. While entry is free, visitors must register for admission (www.cornwallterrace.co.uk); they will be taken around in groups of 50, according to the curators. 22 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028302
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) SAATCHI ONLINE http://magazine.saatchionline.com/top-10-shows/editor%E2%80%99s-pick-%E2%80%93-top-international-shows Editor's Pick - Top International Shows By Rebecca Wilson • October 11, 2010 • Top 10 Shows, Worldwide • Frieze Art Fair October 14 - 17, 2010 Regent's Park London NW1 http://www.friezeartfair.com/ It's Frieze Week once again with 170 galleries from around the world presenting their artists at the fair. There are also talks by Wolfgang Tilmanns, Thomas Demand, Jeremy Deller and Bridget Riley, plus an exciting music and film programme. With Zoo not happening this year, the best emerging artists will be found at Sunday, a new fair at P3 Ambika space on Marylebone Road (just a stone's throw from Regent's Park) and supported by the Zabludowicz Collection. New Sensations 2010 15-20 October 2010 2 Cornwall Terrace London NW1 www.saatchigallery.com/4ns This year's New Sensations show, featuring 20 recent graduates shortlisted for the Saatchi Gallery and Channel 4's prize for art students, is taking place on Cornwall Terrace overlooking Regent's Park as part of a much larger exhibition, 'The House of the Nobleman' which showcases many remarkable works form private collections by artists such as Picasso, Beuys, Kippenberger, Hirst, and Gupta. New Sensations offers a fantastic opportunity to buy works by bright stars of the future. 23 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028303
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) QUINTESSENTIALLY™ http://www.quintessentially.com/insider/tag/london-art-gallery/ Posts Tagged 'london art gallery' The Inferno in the Frieze Thursday, October 14th, 2010 As Frieze mania draws to a close, the capital is playing host to a number of enthralling and original surrounding exhibitions and events this weekend. The labyrinth of tunnels beneath Waterloo Station have been taken over by the Lazarides Gallery, who have installed a mind blowing exhibition called 'Hell's Half Acre'. The space has been transformed into a large-scale evocation of Dante's literary masterpiece Inferno in which a group of young, cutting-edge artists have produced a multi-sensory interpretation of hell, a strange consort of voodoo dolls, taxidermy, suspended bodies and barking staffies. For something a little lighter, seek out Conor Harrington's fleet of suspended model ships and their shadows, as well a Jonathan Yeo nude in 3D. Until 17th October. Catch the 'Anticipation Show' in Selfridges' Ultra-lounge. It has fast become a celebrated, annual showcase of the hottest artists of the moment, and is curated by Kay Saatchi and Catriona Warren. Photographers Noemie Goudal and Robin Friend make stunning contributions with their antithetical takes on the natural landscape. And painter Robert Dowling is no doubt a star in the making material with his clean, monochromatic wall pieces. With arresting video installations and jaw dropping sculptural work from Blue Curry on show too, get yourself down there for a glimpse of the future. Until 10th November. For a star studded affair with big names and big pieces, check out 'The House of the Nobleman'. A special exhibition curated by 'All Visual Arts' Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya, you'll see heralded gems from the likes of Edouard Manet and Picasso jostle alongside iconic Yves Klein and Ron Arad design pieces. The makers and shakers of Modern and Contemporary art await your perusal. Rarely will see you such a heavyweight list of artists all showing under one roof. Until 20th October at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, Regent's Park, NW1. By appointment only. www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse. 24 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028304
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Ross M Brown http://www.rossmbrown.co.uk/articles.html News Saatchi New Sensations 2010 28/09/10 I have been selected to exhibit at the Saatchi/Channel 4 New Sensations show in London alongside 20 other graduates from across the country. The exhibition will be held at 2 Cornwall Terrace next to Regent's Park from the 14th to the 20th of October. New Sensations will be on display alongside the exhibition "The House of the Noble Man", curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz. 25 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028305
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) BROADCAST YOUR SONOCAST YOUR FEEO TO INE MORLO http://www.4rss.com/cadogan-tate-sponsors-new-sensations-art-exhibition.html Cadogan Tate Sponsors 'New Sensations' Art Exhibition (PRWEB) October 17, 2010 Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. A total of 20 students were shortlisted to present their work in the exhibition. This is being held at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace - a magnificent 18th century building off Regent's Park - from 14th to 20th October. The event forms part of 'The House of the Nobleman', under the curatorship of Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. Banesy Four of the finalists in New Sensations 2010 - Pablo Wendel, Katie Surridge, Nika Neelova and Ula Wiznerowicz - have each been given a bursary to develop a new work for the exhibition. A short film about each of them was aired on Channel 4 in early October. Stephen Glynn, Cadogan Tate's Fine Art Director, comments: "We are delighted to be the sponsors of this important exhibition, which showcases the talent of some remarkable young artists. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. It therefore seemed very appropriate that we should support and encourage the UK's leading art students through this exciting event." 26 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028306
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) THE HUFFINGTON POST HUYEMBER 14. 2010 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/artinfo/artinfo-uks-guide-to-frie b 759911.html ARTINFO UK's Guide to Frieze Week 2010 Posted: October 12, 2010 03:11 PM Frieze Week is upon us! Europe's largest contemporary art fair has staked its tent in Regent's Park, bringing with it an estimated $375 million in work by brand-name artists and emerging talents alike, and London is seething with exhibitions and events to welcome the collectors, tastemakers, and various art grandees descending on the city. What to see? Where to go? ARTINFO UK has a few recommendations. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14 You've done Tate Britain, do you really need to go to Tate Modern? Of course you do. First, the newly opened Gauguin exhibition is stunning and simply impossible to miss (it has been described by the Times as "the show of the season -- in fact of the whole year). Second, the new commission by Ai Weiwei, was recently unveiled in Turbine Hall. You can then head north to enjoy Fergus Henderson's English cuisine at St. John Bar & Restaurant in Smithfield, before wandering to ROKEBY for their exhibition of German-born, London-based artist Bettina Buck. Today is also a good day to see "The House of the Noble Man," an exhibition curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskayan. It includes a Cézanne, £6 million ($9.6 million) worth of Picasso, as well as pieces by Damien Hirst, Christian Boltanski, Andy Warhol, Gerhard Richter, and many more -- all in the historical setting of Cornwall Terrace as it overlooks Regent's Park. (This event is by appointment only at Boswell House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, Regents Park, London NW1. To arrange a visit, register at: http://www.cornwallterrace.co.uk/boswallhouse/). 27 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028307
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) EURO2day http://www.euro2day.gr/ftcom en/126/articles/607101/ArticleFTen.aspx The Art Market: a house party Published: 21:54 - 06/10/10 The tabular content relating to this article is not available to view. Apologies in advance for the inconvenience caused. "Frieze week" kicks off this week in London, drawing the cream of the art world to Britain's capital. It is centred of course on the fair that started it all (Frieze opens to the public in Regent's Park on Thursday), but a host of satellite events are also on offer. One of the more intriguing is taking place just down the road from the fair, at 2 Cornwall Terrace, part of an enormously expensive real estate project being developed and sold. In what appears to be a sophisticated way of selling both art and the property, the 18th-century mansion is being used as a temporary venue for an exhibition entitled The House of the Nobleman, October 15-20. The format is hybrid, both commercial and non-commercial, with 68 works on show, half of them loans from collectors - one is David Roberts, the rest are secret - the other half consisting of works of art for sale. The House of the Nobleman is curated by the artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, who has teamed up with a young Russian curator, Victoria Golembiovskaya. It is backed by Mirax, a Russian real estate company that has a "significant but minority" stake in the Cromwell Terrace complex. Mirax belongs to a Russian billionaire, Sergei Polonsky, but Mirax has been troubled since the financial recession and has a reported $120m in debt; the firm did not respond to a request for comment. The eight houses in the Cromwell Terrace complex are priced between £29m and £60m. Various dealers, from the UK and elsewhere, are contributing works of art to the show; they range from two paintings by Poussin to Picasso's "Buste d'Homme à la Pipe" (1969), priced at €3m. Banksy, Richter, Klein, Rodin, Cézanne and Warhol are the unlikely bedfellows in the show, which includes two works by Von Lenkiewicz himself (at £60,000 and £50,000). While entry is free, visitors must register for admission (www.cornwallterrace.co.uk); they will be taken around in groups of 50, according to the curators. 28 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028308
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) © Finangial http://markets.financialcontent.com/stocks/news/read?GUID=15146274 Cadogan Tate Sponsors 'New Sensations' Art Exhibition Sunday October 17, 2010 - 06:04 AM EDT Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art (http://www.cadogantate.com/fineart/contemporary-art-services.html), has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. A total of 20 students were shortlisted to present their work in the exhibition. This is being held at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace - a magnificent 18th century building off Regent's Park - from 14th to 20th October. The event forms part of 'The House of the Nobleman', under the curatorship of Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. Four of the finalists in New Sensations 2010 - Pablo Wendel, Katie Surridge, Nika Neelova and Ula Wiznerowicz - have each been given a bursary to develop a new work for the exhibition. A short film about each of them was aired on Channel 4 in early October. Stephen Glynn, Cadogan Tate's Fine Art (http://www.cadogantate.com/fineart/) Director, comments: "We are delighted to be the sponsors of this important exhibition, which showcases the talent of some remarkable young artists. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. It therefore seemed very appropriate that we should support and encourage the UK's leading art students through this exciting event." Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/10/prweb4659384.htm. 29 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028309
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Blogger™ http://the-original-neonneon.blogspot.com/2010 10 01 archive.html The Neon Art of Tracey Emin Monday, 11 October 2010 Last Friday was spent at 2 Cornwall Terrace, London NW1 next to Regent's Park installing "| Kiss You" by Tracey Emin for "The House of the Nobleman" art exhibition running from October 15th-20th and coinciding with the Frieze Art Fair. Curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya the show comprises 68 works of art from both private collectors and art dealers including works by Picasso, Poussin, Rodin, Cezanne, Warhol, Banksy and of course Tracey Emin. You Entry to the exhibition is free but you will need to register for admission. Well worth a look if you are going to Frieze. 30 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028310
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Blogger™* http://stuartblakley.blogspot.com/2010/10/house-of-nobleman.html The House of the Nobleman Yes But Is It Art? An Elegant Madness: High Society in Regency England Saturday morning. What to do what to do? Fortunately a rather nice invite has arrived to the mysteriously named House of the Nobleman. It's Before Midday and North of The River but said nobleman is allegedly a Russian billionaire so it's hard to say no. Plus champers and canapés are champers and canapés. And it's a gallery in a house so really we have to check out the competition. http://www.oakmayneproperties.com "Highlight of Freeze!" shouts the press release. We'll see. First impressions are good. The house is on the Outer Circle of The Regent's Park and just like the theatre that's the place to be hot. Important looking girl asks us have we been invited. "Qu'est-ce que c'est?" Indoors, the ceilings are surprisingly low for us six footers. The interior designer clearly has a penchant for egg-&- dart cornicing. It's everywhere, except where it's broken by over-scaled doors. Marble bathrooms, lit stair treads, shiny black kitchen. It's all a bit bling for Lavender's Blue taste and we don't really do Post 1900 anyway. But my gosh the art on display reads like a Who's Who list. Here's a tour: "Is it Art or is it a Chair?" asks Zelda in a loud stage whisper But where's the Bubbly? When Alvar met Andy on the landing 31 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028311
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) FINE ART http://www.olyviafineart.com/blog/?cat=1 The House of a Noble Man Posted on October 14, 2010 by admin Olyvia Fine Art invites you to the exhibition "The House of a Noble Man", where we'll be exhibiting some works by Andy Warhol. THE HOUSE OF A NOBLE MAN 15 - 20 October 2010 Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, ... Continue reading → Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment Diplomat Magazine, October 2010 Posted on October 12, 2010 by admin Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment Evening Standard Magazine, September 2010 Posted on October 12, 2010 by admin Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment Must have, Must See, Must Do ... Daily Mail 19/10/2010 Posted on October 4, 2010 by admin Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment "An Intimate Exhibition ... on an Influential Movement" Shortlist Magazine Posted on September 16, 2010 by admin 32 HOUSE_ _OVERSIGHT_028312
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) artbistro™ create and connect http://artbistro.monster.com/news/articles/11590-6m-worth-of-picassos-to-go-on-show-during-frieze £6m worth of Picassos to go on show during Frieze Gareth Harris, October 15, 2010 Four rare works by Picasso thought to be worth over £6m and an 1875 Cézanne oil on canvas will go on sale during Frieze week next month in an ambitious exhibition to be held at a London property part owned by a Russian billionaire. The show, entitled "The House of the Noble Man" (12-20 October), will open at 2 Cornwall Terrace, an 18th-century building off Regent's Park in London near to the Frieze Art Fair site. The exhibition is curated by artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, whose works will feature in the display, and Russian curator Victoria Golembiovskaya. Around €20m worth of art will be for sale, approximately a third of the show, confirms Von Lenkiewicz. According to the co-curator, the Picasso pieces on offer will include Buste d'Homme à la Pipe (1969, priced at £3m); the 1905 drawing The Family of Saltimbanques and a cubist painting, Nature Morte au Gobelet (around 1914). An 1875 oil on canvas by Cézanne, Don Quixote, is priced at £1.25m. Works by Yves Klein, Egon Schiele, Gerhard Richter, Damien Hirst and Andy Warhol will also be for sale. Von Lenkiewicz's own works will be in the £30,000-£60,000 price range. "The Picassos etc. are from anonymous dealers who will take their portion of the percentages. Any other proceeds made during the show will go back into the funding of the exhibition which is hugely expensive despite its sponsorship [by the Russian real estate company Mirax]," adds Von Lenkiewicz. A selection of works from Charles Saatchi's "New Sensations 2010" roster of emerging artists will also be for sale. Twenty students shortlisted for the prize, which is sponsored by Cadogan Tate, have been chosen to present their work; these artists include Matthew Welch, Katie Sims and Pablo Wendel. A non-selling section will include works from the London-based Zabludowicz Collection and the holdings of the Iraqi-born industrialist Ragdan El-akabi. "The show came about when I was in Moscow exhibiting my work at Triumph Gallery. Victoria took me to the Mirax city project, a huge development in central Moscow. She talked to Sergei Polonsky [head of Mirax] about the Cornwall Terrace buildings which he has shares in. He was willing to sponsor the show," says Von Lenkiewicz. The Mirax group are co-developers of the Cornwall Terrace historical complex, parts of which are up for sale. Ironically the exhibition, awash with blue-chip items, is meant to reflect the typical tastes of a 21st-century collector who may well treat art as a commodity. "The notion of the noble man with sangre azul, [with] blue blood developing a blue-grey skin tone from eating off the family silver, has prevailed for centuries. But this idea is bankrupt, outmoded. Our collector spends his days and nights bathed in the blue light of a computer screen, as he trades in dematerialised securities, or price options based on weather conditions on the other side of the globe," according to a press statement. "It is important that the show comes across strongly as a curatorial concept playing with the idea of commerce, mirroring the [art] market with irony. We based the idea around nobility and bankrupt values in a post humanist age," says Von Lenkiewicz. 33 HOUSE _OVERSIGHT_028313
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) scene. art design culture ideas http://www.alyngriffiths.com/scene/2010/10/the-house-of-the-noble-man/ The House of the Noble Man October 18th, 2010 This presentation of works by some of the world's best known artists was intended more as a showcase for the incredible property in which it took place than for the art itself. The eight residences in this newly redevelopec Regency terrace happen to be on the market at the moment and, with the Frieze Art Fair taking place a stone'. throw away in Regent's Park, this was a perfect opportunity to entice wealthy collectors to view a potential home or pied-à-terre. The House of the Noble Man is supposed to evoke the home of a fictitious 21st century merchant - a digital tycoon, trader and investor who collects art as a way of lending materiality to his otherwise transient and ethereal existence. Only the best will do in this sort of setting and curators Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya managed to procure an astonishing selection of pieces including paintings, sculpture and installation works by Yves Klein, Alexander Calder, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin and Banksy. Contemporary design furniture from Carpenters Workshop Gallery helped to remind the visitor that you were in a home rather than a gallery. Also included in the presentation were the works of the four finalists from Channel 4 and the Saatchi Gallery's New Sensations 2010, a prize for artists graduating from UK art courses. It would be impossible not to be impressed by the ambition and quality of this presentation and it certainly provided a refreshingly serene and luxurious experience in comparison to the mêlée down the road at Frieze. However, there was something uncomfortable about viewing all of this wonderful art in what was, in essence, the world's most expensive show home. I guess the true success of this exhibition will be determined by whether any of the properties sell and, for me, art should be treated as more than a sales tool. 34 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028314
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) Zabludowicz Collection http://www.zabludowiczcollection.com/collection/art-diarv/2010/11/paris-new-york-london Anita's Art Diay Tuesday 02 November 2010 We made it to Paris for fiac which as usual was a delightfully elegant experience. Paris for the day by Eurostar is so easy. Everyone was smiling, happy and friendly. We loved at Mitchell-Innes & Nash William Pope. L's performance: three world leaders holding a huge- looking meteorite excreting dye all over them at their own command....... Francis Chantala would not let me look at the Josh Smith paintings he was being most difficult. There are some strange sights at art fairs: a woman artist dragging around a Louis Vuitton dustbin. Perhaps she was hoping someone would drop in a nice little unwanted designer package into her bin. We dropped by to see Jim Lambie in his show in Paris. My amazing designer friend Jean Pierre Tortil, Elliot Mcdonald and Jim. Back to London and we visited Wolfe Lenkiewicz at his show The House of the Noble Man. It was a very lovely show in a lavish £50 million home in Regents Park. We found on the top floor a lovely work by Matthew Welch called In The Glass Coffin of the Virgin Forest, the artist was one of Channel 4s New Sensations. 35 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028315
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) glass http://www.theglassmagazine.com/forum/article.asp?tid=1968#title frieze art fair: a glass guide Our online art team pick out what - and who - to watch out for at this year's fair Posted: 12 October 2010 Despite the difficult last two years, Frieze is playing host to some big numbers this time around. Christie's will hold its annual October Post-War and Contemporary Art evening auction, with the top lot - I Am Become Death, Shatterer of Worlds, a butterfly canvas by Damien Hirst - going for an estimated £2.5m-£3.5m. Other notable sales to watch out for are Andreas Gursky's photomontage of the New York Stock Exchange, last seen hanging in the boardroom at Lehman Brothers (estimate: £100,000 - £150,000), and Sotheby's sales from Jerry Hall's extraordinary collection, which includes work by Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud and Andy Warhol. The fair's fringe is looking more diverse than ever this year. For quiet classicism, The House of the Noble Man, a stone's throw away in Cornwall Terrace, is a definite highlight. Curated by Victoria Golembiovskaya and the artist Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, it will include four rare Picassos and Cezanne's Don Quixote. Meanwhile, purveyors looking for modern artist-led work should head to Screening. An independent art exhibition on 203-205 Brompton Road - a purpose-built exhibition space within a Knightsbridge office block - rising stars will be showing alongside heavyweight Toby Ziegler and much-talked about video artist Ryan Trecartin. The temporal format of video art will be considered in this sprawling building as an extension of work on canvas - with the help of some of London's brightest new young painters. There are a few satellite fairs for the collectors craving boutique shopping after getting an eyeful at the main event. The Pavilion of Art and Design will be returning to Berkeley Square, Mayfair, for the fourth year running, featuring 50 distinguished international dealers of modern art, design, decorative arts, photography, jewellery and tribal art. SUNDAY, a free three-day event in Marylebone's Ambika P3, is shaping up to be an intriguing replacement to Zoo, according to the Independent. Sponsored by the Zabludowicz Collection, it features 20 up- and-coming galleries from all over the world. Whitechapel Gallery is also making some noise on the periphery, displaying works from the D.Daskalopoulos collection in Greece - one of the foremost collections of contemporary art in Europe. Syma Taria, art editor 36 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028316
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) PRWeb Online Visibility from Vocus http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/10/prweb4659384.htm Cadogan Tate Sponsors 'New Sensations' Art Exhibition Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. (PRWEB) October 17, 2010 Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. A total of 20 students were shortlisted to present their work in the exhibition. This is being held at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace - a magnificent 18th century building off Regent's Park - from 14th to 20th October. The event forms part of 'The House of the Nobleman', under the curatorship of Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. Four of the finalists in New Sensations 2010 - Pablo Wendel, Katie Surridge, Nika Neelova and Ula Wiznerowicz - have each been given a bursary to develop a new work for the exhibition. A short film about each of them was aired on Channel 4 in early October. Stephen Glynn, Cadogan Tate's Fine Art Director, comments: "We are delighted to be the sponsors of this important exhibition, which showcases the talent of some remarkable young artists. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. It therefore seemed very appropriate that we should support and encourage the UK's leading art students through this exciting event." 37 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028317
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) CITYA.M. • BUSNESS WITH PERSONNLITY http://www.cityam.com/lifestyle/books/the-art-world-heats-once-more The art world heats up once more Wednesday, 13th October 2010 Timothy Barber has a look around Frieze Art Fair, which opens to the public today AS an army of glamorous art industry movers and shakers traipsed into Frieze Art Fair's marquee yesterday, a young woman was standing outside distributing paper leaflets for an upcoming exhibition. Not that surprising perhaps - some galleries need all the help they can get publicising themselves - except that the gallery in question was the Royal Academy. That London's most august art institution should find itself flyering outside a tent in Regent's Park is one measure of the extent to which the capital's art scene now triangulates itself around Frieze. There are others. The National Gallery's new exhibition of works by the 18th century Venetian artist Canaletto has coincided with Frieze this week; the merry-go-round of satellite exhibitions now includes one from The Saatchi Gallery - its owner, Charles Saatchi, practically gave birth to London's contemporary art scene as we know it, after all - called The House of the Noble Man, in a residence near Frieze, which puts Cezanne, Manet, Poussin and Picasso alongside Richter, Murakami and Hirst; and of course, Frieze now dictates the timing of the contemporary art auctions that are the most immediate signifier of the health - or otherwise - of the art market. As far as that goes, Anders Petterson, managing director of art market analyst ArtTactic, says the mood is cautiously optimistic. After a rotten 2009, record-breaking February sales apparently signified a return to business as normal, but momentum slowed in the summer with some shows falling significantly short. "People got carried away with the rebound earlier in the year and sellers got a little greedy with the estimates they demanded, so the summer sales were a bit down," Petterson says. "Since then the market has revived a bit, and people are being more realistic about the situation." 38 HOUSE_ _OVERSIGHT_028318
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) yeeyan ta http://source.yeeyan.org/view/180252 Obf/ FRIEZE 2010 luckyzhouxi flEft T• 2010-11-06 21:29:34 This year's annual London Frieze 2010 was the strongest Frieze fair since the global economic collapse that began in autumn 2008. Frieze 2010 saw noticeable increases in artwork sales activity; better certainly than the last two Frieze fairs. Good or bad, these temporary exhibits in ritzy mansions in central London's most expensive neighborhoods, are a far cry from the gritty underground art happenings of earlier alternative venues. Temporarily setting up in fashionablecentral London locales walking distance to Frieze's fair grounds inside Regent Park is admittedly an ultra commercial way to sell art. After all, one might argue, the aim of selling art is the same whether in a humble fair booth, or an exaggerated mansion. This author admits to attending two suchevents, one in a historic townhouse former embassy of an African nation, [1] the other in a newly built super-luxury home with not only artwork for purchase but also the venue - a newly built marble fixtured mansion in Regent's Park itself for sale, with a price tag of50 million dollars. [2] The former showed newly commissioned works made especially for the exhibition by a variety of contemporary artists including Jake and Dinos Chapman, Tim Noble and Sue Webster and Wim Delvoye. The latter showed everyone from Cezanne to Rodin to Zeng Fanzhi and Yin Zhaoyang, and felt more like a collective effort of secondary market sale works consigned from various dealers and owners. The artworks one assumes are used to make the house-for-sale more beautiful and presumably also more sale-able. Interesting Russian contemporary works were also included, fueling rumors of Russian financial backing for the Regent's Park situated mansion-for sale-with-or-without- artworks. MegMaggio Beijing, October 2010 [1] See the aptly titled "Vanitas: The Transience of Earthly Pleasures" organized by All Visual Arts at 33 Portland Place, London, W1B 1QE, www.allvisualarts.org [2] See "The House of the Nobleman", Boswall House, 2 Cornwell Terrace, Regent's Park, London, NW1 4QP 39 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028319
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) ben zing a THE TRADING IDEA NETWORK http://www.benzinga.com/press-releases/10/10/p527693/cadogan-tate-sponsors-'new-sensations-art-exhibition Cadogan Tate Sponsors 'New Sensations' Art Exhibition Posted on 10/17/10 at 6:00am by webmaster Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. (PRWEB) October 17, 2010 Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. A total of 20 students were shortlisted to present their work & in the exhibition. This is being held at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace - a magnificent 18th century building off Regent's Park - from 14th to 20th October. The event forms part of 'The House of the Nobleman', under the curatorship of Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. Four of the finalists in New Sensations 2010 - Pablo Wendel, Katie Surridge, Nika Neelova and Ula Wiznerowicz - have each been given a bursary to develop a new work for the exhibition. A short film about each of them was aired on Channel 4 in early October. Stephen Glynn, Cadogan Tate's Fine Art Director, comments: "We are delighted to be the sponsors of this important exhibition, which showcases the talent of some remarkable young artists. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. It therefore seemed very appropriate that we should support and encourage the UK's leading art students through this exciting event." For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2010/10/prweb4659384.htm 40 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028320
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) http://www.abodyofartshop.com/art-moran-body-shop/cadogan-tate-sponsors-new-sensations-art- exhibition.html Cadogan Tate Sponsors New Sensations Art Exhibition October 18, 2010 by Filed under art moran body shop (PRWEB) October 17, 2010 Cadogan Tate, the world class art moving, storage and shipping specialist in contemporary art, has sponsored the 'New Sensations 2010' exhibition for UK art students. Organised by Channel 4 and The Saatchi Gallery, this prestigious event aims to discover the most imaginative and talented artists graduating from BA and MA courses in the UK and to support students leaving art college. A total of 20 students were shortlisted to present their work in the exhibition. This is being held at Boswall House, 2 Cornwall Terrace - a magnificent 18th century building off Regent's Park - from 14th to 20th October. The event forms part of 'The House of the Nobleman', under the curatorship of Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. Four of the finalists in New Sensations 2010 - Pablo Wendel, Katie Surridge, Nika Neelova and Ula Wiznerowicz - have each been given a bursary to develop a new work for the exhibition. A short film about each of them was aired on Channel 4 in early October. Stephen Glynn, Cadogan Tate's Fine Art Director, comments: "We are delighted to be the sponsors of this important exhibition, which showcases the talent of some remarkable young artists. We have spent many years transporting and storing the world's most precious contemporary art for leading museums, galleries and collectors. It therefore seemed very appropriate that we should support and encourage the UK's leading art students through this exciting event." 41 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028321
16 Interiors THE TIMES Friday October 29 2010 The art of the home deal Culture can be key to the marketing of a grand property, writes Kasia • Maciejowska N owadays you have to try a little harder to sell any house. For deluxe developers, having a mutually beneficial Link with the fine-art world is a key strategy. At Frieze, the celebrity-soaked autumn London art fair, the developer Oakmayne Bespoke held an exhibition - The House of the Nobleman - in one of the grand London town houses that it The result? Significant interest in the two properties - offers of €29 million and £39 million - with another to go on the market next year, along with the sale of six major artworks. The properties in Cornwall Terrace overlook Regents lark, wnere the fair m held. Frieze was attended by the world's wealtbiest collectors, the highest-profile dealers, including Jay Jopling, curators for the top museums and art enthusiasts such as Claudia Schiffer, Gwyneth Paltrow and Lily Allen. The exhibition, held in connection with the Saatchi Gallery, was curated by two Russians, Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskava. Mirax, the Russian property firm owned by Sergei Polonsky, has a stake in the Cornwall Terrace project. Works by Cézannie, Picasso, Andy Warhol, Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst were among those on show in the staircases, bathrooms and attics of the house. James Simpson, a partner at Knight Frank, says: "The interplay between luxury art and property sales has always existed, but it's only now, starting with Cornwall Terrace, that we are formally doing launches and activities. that bring together the two." Beth Dean, the sales and marketing director at Oakmayne, agrees: "Even at this top end of the property market, sales need to be worked. It is no longer enough to do a basic stand-alone launch with a residential product. You need to do something unique, stylish and very special to differentiate your brand." Simpson says that there are more Damien Hirst works in the residences surrounding Regent's Park than in any other London location: "The marriage of the classic Regency properties and contemporary art works really well." cornwallterrace.co.uk, knightfrank. co.ak, christiesgreatestates.com It is no longer enough to do a stand-alone launch, even at the top end of the market Main picture: The interior of a Corowall Terrace mansion: Regent's Park, above, is just on the doorstep; and the art collector Claudia Schiffer, below, at this year's Frieze art fair in London Luxury art Sales figures from Christie's and Knight Frank show that the purchase of a luxury property is frequently followed by a string of high-value art purchases. Christie's even takes extremely valuable works to the new home before it has been purchased, as a test run. Ifit is not suitable, the piece is returned free of charge. decorated in keeping with the work of art, rather than the reverse. How to pick up affordable art without the hassle Anyone looking to pick up more modestly priced works of art may encounter an obstacle - a snooty gallery owner questioning you about what pieces you already own. However, you can avoid such terrifying scenarios by buying online. Culture Label recently opened an online art shop, with work from 550 artists costing between £100 and £2,000. The shop is a collaboration with Own Art, an Arts Council initiative, through which you can pay in interest-free instalments. Meanwhile, the website easyart.com, which tailors its artworks to buyers launched an iPhone app that lets you test 50,000 prints, in different frames, in a picture of the room that you wish to decorate. Not everyone recommends buying online, however, as we discovered by asking top interior designers for their tips on purchasing art for your home. Joanna Wood, head of the eponymous luxury interior design firm. firmly states that buying online is never a good • idea for original artworks. *For a series of prints that you have seen before, online could be an option. But don't buy an original painting from a website because so much of it is about texture. feel and perspective." Wood shops for works in the streets off Piccadilly, but also recommends the Art London fair for affordable pieces, as does Anita Kohn, of the architectural firm Living in Space, who also loves the Affordable Art Fair. "The atmosphere is buzzy, the gallerists are friendly and no piece costs more than £3,000," she says. "I used to buy randomly, but now I am more focused and collect works on paper - Old Master drawings or Impressionist works, often from sale rooms." Kamini Ezralow, of the international design company Intarya, recommends scouring markets and galleries when travelling to pick up local art and craft pieces: "If you see a work in a gallery that you like closer to home, go back and ask to see more by the same artist. You can then build a relationship with that gallerist and use them as a regular source for pieces that suit your taste and price capacity." Kohn recommends starting with prints and advises shopping with an open mind "so that you don't buy something purely because it fits with your self-imposed criteria. The vital thing is to buy something that you love, because you will be looking at it every single day". HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028322
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028323 Frieze Week Around the city East west, art's best: you can even buy the house it's shown in With the absence of Zoo, the Pavilion of Art & Design (PAD) (until October 17; www.padlondon.net) will this year play second fiddle to Frieze. This sophisticated fair of modern and contemporary art, design, photography and tribal art from 1860 was conceived by Patrick Perrin and Stéphane Custot and is now in its fourth year. PAD has retained its place in Berkeley Square, a site that offers limited space expansion, but a sought-after Mayfair address. As auction houses all jostle to cash in on the festival spirit, Christie's is launching an initiative entitled Multiplied (October 15-18; www.multipliedartfair.com) at its South Kensington saleroom. The focus of this fair is contemporary art editions - photographs, prints, artists' books and 3D multiples - and there will be big names, including John Baldessari, Mat Collishaw and Gerald Laing, on sale for small prices. Another example of canny innovation - or outsiders crashing the party - is House of the Nobleman at 2 Cornwall Terrace (October 15-20; www.cornwallterrace. co.uk/boswallhouse). This is a property viewing with a difference: not only is the house itself on the market, but so is much of the art - including works by Pablo Picasso, Helen Chadwick and Grayson Perry - that decorates its interior. While the majority of Frieze Week events take place in grandiose settings in London's West End, a couple of contrasting fairs are capitalising on sites in the city's East End. The Future Can Wait (until October 17; www.thefuturecanwait.com), an alternative fair started by FINANCIAL TIMESS WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 13 2010 Variety Top, from left: Zipora, Fried, 'R.H.", Sunday; John Baldessari, 'Brain/Cloud (With Seascape & Palm Tree)', Christie's/Multiplied: Polly Morgan, 'Carrion Call', Moniker; Labrona, 'Trinity' Moniker, Ricoenio Reviüi, 'Test (Yellow Flower)'; Sunday. Below: a Bamana figure from Ségou, PAD trusted talent-spotters Zavier Ellis and Simon Rumley, returns to Shoreditch Town Hall for the fourth year runnina
Future art stars cause a New Sensation Graduates' work is exhibited with masterpieces Louise Jury Chief Arts Correspondent TWENTY artists hailed as stars of the future are getting the chance to show their work alongside that of 60 masters, from Picasso and Warhol to Manet, Rodin and Cézanne. The 20 were chosen from hundreds of graduate students in the New Sensations Prize, a contest now in its fourth year, organised by Charles Saatchi's gallery and Channel 4. Their work is part of The House of the Nobleman, an exhibition of art bor- rowed from international collections that is being staged in an 18th-century mansion in Cornwall Terrace, Regent's Park, a stone's throw from the Frieze Art Fair. Four of the graduates were selected to receive E1,000 bursaries to develop a project for inclusion. They are: Ger- man Pablo Wendel, 30, whose degree work involved squatting in a derelict chip shop to which he built a staircase, later dismantled by Royal College of Art staff in a health and safety row; Katie Surridge, 25, and Russian Nika "The 20 shortlisted artists have created a stunning range of work Rebecca WIlson associate director, Saatch! Gallery Promise: Nika Neelova's Principles Of Surrender, above, and St Peter's Seminary: Wilderness 2010 by Ross M Brown Neelova, 23, both Slade School gradu- ates, and Ross M Brown, 24, who is still studying in Dundee. One of them will be named this year's overall winner on Monday and the exhibition runs until Wednesday. Rebecca Wilson, associate director of the Saatchi Gallery, said: *The 20 shortlisted artists have created a stunning range of work, including photography, painting, installation and sculpture. The exhibition offers a wonderful opportunity to discover the bright stars of the future." More than half of the graduate artists are based in the capital. "London is still one of the best places to do a fine art degree and has that reputation across the world, as well as being one of the most vibrant centres for contemporary art," Ms Wilson added I New Sensations at the House of the Nobleman, 2 Cornwall Terrace, is open until Wednesday. For more, log on to: cornwall terrace co.uk/boswall house HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028324
THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY 10 OCTOBER 2010 NEWS Business REGENTS GALLERY Cornwall Terrace, above, will house art by Nicolas Poussin, far left, Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz, left and Paul Cezanne, right TESSA ANGUS, PICASA 30 ART IN RESIDENCE Redevelopec park terrace hosts exhibit Curators Victoria Golem- blovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz, in collaboration with the Saatchi Gallery and Channel 4's New Sensations, will host an art exhibition starting next Sunday show- casing famous works by artists such as Paul Cezanne and Pablo Picasso. The House of the Nobleman exhibit which coincides with the Frieze Art Fair, will be held at the mansion No 2 Cornwall Terrace in Regents Park and will include works from several international art collections. No 2 Corn: wall Terrace has been extensively redeveloped by developer Oakmayne Bespoke and is part of a much larger redevelopment of Cornwall Terrace to create eight mansions. The houses are up for sale starting at £29m Deirdre Hipwell The City Diary The Prince and the Another week, another meeting betw BC Group (British Gas in old money) a Prince Andrew, our special representa international trade and investment. T company has a rather cosy relations the Duke of York, having met him thr in five weeks early this year. Now I see that BO's chief executive Chapman, was back at the Palace last his fourth audience in six months, wh nothing to quell rumours that someth rumbling in Kazakhstan, where the ec has important interests. Prince Andrew is exceptionally w connected in that country through t friendship with Goga Ashkenazi (tor socialite-cum-oil executive who has with Timur Kulibayev, the son-in-la Kazakhstan's president. Kulibayev a bought a house from the Prince, sor for a generous fee. Help jobless homes, help the economy Horse trials Betfair, the soon-to-be floated betting exchange, reveals in its prospectus that it has abandoned its new high= roller business, which it was testing out. This was despite it booking first-quarter revenues of £25m and making a E7m profit - at least at the Ebitda level - but it did involve the company taking on the HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028325
















































































































































