London: Stealing Banksy

 

Stealing Banksy

This week end takes place an exhibition called Stealing Banksy featuring pieces that have been removed from the streets to be sold at auction.

The event organisers  claim that “the Sincura Group do not steal art, nor do we condone any acts of wanton vandalism or theft. We have never approached anyone to remove any artwork or encouraged its removal. We do not own the pieces of art. To date we have made no financial gain from the sale of any street art.”

To view the exhibition tickets costs between £17.50 to £200 per person for corporate packages, with a portion going to Nelson Mandela Charity.

On his website, Banksy statement is clear and also tongue in cheek:

Banksy Website

None of the artworks do have formal authentication by Banksy.

First is a trailer that was painted before the owners drove the truck to the Glastonbury Festival in 1998, and which was then auctioned in 2008 in London.

Fragile Silence Trailer
Stealing Banksy     Stealing Banksy
And it’s gone…

Appearing in East London in 2006, OldSkool features  four pensioners dressed in hoodies and baseball caps and a boombox.

Stealing Banksy

Painted in 2009 in Tottenham Green, London, the No Ball Games piece showing two children playing  has been cut into a rather heavy  triptych.

Stealing Banksy     Stealing Banksy Stealing Banksy
With Robin Barton from Bankrobber

The Boy with heart (2006) was already shown in another exhibition of street “reclaimed” artworks Banksy Please Love Me back in 2009 in London Covent Garden (covered here) . Also featured is a vandalised door from a Berlin with some rats (2003) and a board depicting a stenciled guard with a witty message “Secured by sleepy migrant workers on minimum wage” .

Banksy - Please Love Me  Stealing Banksy  Stealing Banksy  Stealing Banksy    Stealing Banksy

Banksy Sperm Alarm, placed on a Hotel in London Victoria in 2011, made the headlines when it was stolen and the thief arrested and sentenced after trying to flog it on ebay (more info here). It is now offered for sale at an estimate price of £150 000.

sperm alarm 02sperm alarm 01     Stealing Banksy

The Sincura Group has estimated that Banksy’s murals will sell at the following prices:
No Ball Games – estimated value is £1m
Old Skool – £750,000
Liverpool Rat – £225,000
Sperm Alarm – £150,000
Silent majority – £175,000
Girl With Balloon – £400,000
2 Rats – £200,000

Interestingly a large canvas Brace Yourself is also featured in the exhibition, but not for sale, as if to legitimate the whole show. The canvas was given to Simon Duncan for changing his initial band’s name “Exit Through the Gift Shop” to Brace Yourself so that Banksy could use it for his projects.

Stealing BanksyStealing Banksy     Stealing Banksy

View the full set of pics here

The whole point of street art is placement and its ephemeral nature for the public to enjoy. It is not intented to be moved or be preserved, but evolve with the environment. By removing the Banksy street pieces, the original message is lost and definitively does not work in the settings of a chic hotel or for selected greedy investors.

 

London: Lynn Chadwick steel beasts at RA

Lynn Chadwick - RCA

A group of sculptures by Lynn Chadwick RA (1914 – 2003) has been installed in the Royal Academy‘s Annenberg Courtyard, as part of celebrations to make the centenary of his birth. The installation, organised in collaboration with Blain Southern gallery, features four works from his series of steel beasts that were made between 1989-1990. It is the first time that this group of sculptures has been shown together in public.

Lynn Chadwick - RCA     Lynn Chadwick - RCA   Lynn Chadwick - RCALynn Chadwick - RCA  Lynn Chadwick - RCA   Lynn Chadwick - RCALynn Chadwick - RCA

View the full set here

Lynn Chadwick
Until 16 May 2014
Royal Academy of Arts
Burlington House
London W1J 0BD

London: Hebru Brantley – Everyone’s Everything

Hebru Brantley

Chicago based artist Hebru Brantley recently launched his UK solo show  Everyone’s Everything at Mead Carney Fine Art in London.

Inspired by pop culture icons, comic book heroes, Japanese anime, the body of works consists of a series of paintings and sculptures featuring child like heroes surrounded by colourful imaginary landscapes and scribble text, exploring the optimism and possibilities of youth.

Hebru Brantley  Hebru Brantley  Hebru BrantleyHebru Brantley    Hebru BrantleyHebru BrantleyHebru Brantley     Hebru BrantleyHebru Brantley     Hebru Brantley

View the full set of pics here

Hebru Brantley – Everyone’s Everything
Until 3 May 2014
Mead Carney Fine Art Gallery
London

London: Tauba Auerbach – New Ambidextrous Universe

Tauba Auerbach

San Francisco-born, New York-based artist Tauba Auerbach, who works in a wide variety of media including sculpture, photography, painting, weaving and book design is showing her first solo exhibition at the ICA in London.
Passionate about topology, the mathematical study of shapes, Auerbach show’s title “New Ambidextrous Universe” comes from a book by Martin Gardner, a popular math writer famous for his puzzles in Scientific American magazine.

The show features newly created sculptures and photographs leveraging a mathematician’s model of symmetry and reflection as a means to hint at an alternate, mirror universe. Geometrical steel sculptures refer to mathematical puzzles but also patterns and symmetry found in life. Some wavy wooden sculptures represent her interpretation of a piece of plywood sent into a fourth dimension.

Tauba AuerbachTauba AuerbachTauba AuerbachTauba AuerbachTauba AuerbachTauba Auerbach     Tauba AuerbachTauba Auerbach

View the full set of pics here

Tauba Auerbach – The New Ambidextrous Universe
Until 15 June 2014
ICA
Institute of Contemporary Arts
The Mall
London
SW1Y 5AH

London: Rone – Wallflower

Rone - Wallflower

Known for his large scale female portraits across the globe, Australian street artist Rone has debuted his first UK solo show Wallflower at StolenSpace in London.

The exhibition showcases a series of artworks with his female muse surrounded by flowers on reclaimed wooden crates. Through a clever juxtaposition of layers, delicate and transparent portraits blend on a decaying background. While in London, Rone also painted a mural in London Brick Lane.


Rone - Wallflower     Rone - WallflowerRone - Wallflower          Rone - Wallflower     Rone - WallflowerRone - Wallflower     Rone - WallflowerRone - WallflowerRone - Wallflower     Rone - WallflowerRone - Wallflower

View the full set of pics here

Rone – Wallflower
Until 4 May 2014
Stolenspace
17 Osborn St, London E1 6TD