Macmillan De`Longhi Art Auction Lot Book 2009

Transcription

Macmillan De`Longhi Art Auction Lot Book 2009
MACMILLAN DE’LONGHI ART AUCTION
IN AID OF MACMILLAN CANCER SUPPORT
29th September 2009
De’Longhi
Foreword from Nigel Wainwright, Managing Director, De’Longhi UK
I’m delighted to welcome you all to the third annual Macmillan De’Longhi Art Auction.
Macmillan touches the lives of so many people at a time when they desperately need support and we are privileged to
be able to contribute to this amazing work through our event.
The auction will be supporting Macmillan’s World’s Biggest Coffee Morning, and brings together De’Longhi’s dedication
to style and design along with the talent and passion of leading artists. The aim of this auction is to increase Macmillan’s
awareness, as a source of support and a force for change. We hope to raise a significant amount to help improve the
lives of the 2 million people living with cancer in the UK.
It is now the third year running and I am genuinely overwhelmed by the continuous generosity and support of all the
artists involved. From photographs, sculptures, paintings and prints there is something from this celebrated collection of
artists that will tempt all, and we hope they will encourage you to contribute to this auction.
.
Nigel Wainwright, Managing Director, De’Longhi UK
3
Macmillan Cancer Support
How did it all begin?
In 1911, a young man named Douglas Macmillan watched his father die of cancer. His father’s pain and suffering moved
Douglas so much, he founded the ‘Society for the Prevention and Relief of Cancer.’
Douglas wanted advice and information to be provided to all people with cancer, homes for patients at low or no cost,
and voluntary nurses to attend to patients in their own homes.
Today much of Douglas’ legacy lives on. We are still a source of support for people living with cancer and we are a force for
improving cancer care.
What do we do now?
There are three times as many people in Britain living with cancer than there were 30 years ago. In fact, over two million of
us are living with it, and one in three of us will be diagnosed at some point in our lives.
With improvements in screening, diagnosis and treatment, more and more people are being diagnosed earlier and living
with cancer for longer. They’re often spending less time in hospital and more time at home. Cancer is becoming a part of
more and more people’s daily lives.
When you have cancer, it has an impact on every aspect of your life – from your
emotions to your finances. And as you learn to cope with the shock and distress
of diagnosis and the changes cancer can bring, you need a range of support –
and so do your family and friends. That’s where Macmillan comes in.
People affected by cancer have told us they need help living their lives, today.
The concerns people have are not just medical, they’re practical, emotional
and financial. How will I get to my hospital appointment? Who will walk the dog?
How will I pay the bills when I have to take time off work? Who will listen and
understand? Who will help improve the situation - for me and others like me?
We are here to help with all these things.
We are Macmillan Cancer Support.
4
‘When I first found out I had
cancer I felt like I was in a headon crash. No-one wants a journey
like cancer. But when I was at my
most fearful, lonely and frightened,
I somehow found the strength,
because I had my family and
people like Macmillan to help
get me through.’
Audrey Brown, London
So how exactly do we provide this help?
Specialist Care
Our 3,942 specialist health and social care professionals are leaders in their field, supporting people physically and
emotionally. Our cancer care centres have been designed using our longstanding experience of ‘healing environments’,
proven for their positive effect on people’s recovery and wellbeing.
Practical support
We know that help with practical things can make a real difference to someone’s quality of life while they are living with
cancer. People need practical support at home, so we provide anything from some precious time off for a carer, to a lift to
hospital.
Emotional support
People need emotional support, so we listen, advise and share information
through our helpline, website, support groups and trained professionals.
Financial support
People need financial help to cope with the extra costs cancer can bring, so we
give benefits advice, and grants for anything from heating bills to travel costs.
We rely on our supporters for
99% of our income. Without you
we couldn’t provide any of our
services for people living
with cancer.
Information and support
When you’re affected by cancer, having the right kind of information at the right time is essential. We recognise that
different people want different levels of information and they want it delivered in ways that suit them. We have 148 cancer
information and support services throughout the UK. Our Mobile Macmillan Cancer Information Centre travels the country,
reaching people who may not access cancer information in any other way. The Macmillan helpline provides information
and emotional support to people affected by cancer by phone, email and post.
Helping people help themselves
We link people affected by cancer to over 750 self help and support groups around the country.
www . macmillan . or g . uk
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The Auction Proceedings
Live Auction
If you would like the option to bid in the live auction you will first need to register. Registration forms are enclosed with your
catalogue. Please complete your registration form and hand it in at the registration desk when you arrive at The Avenue.
You will then be allocated a paddle number.
There will be 18 art works available in the live auction, as detailed on the first 7 to 25 pages of this book. The live auction
will begin at 8:00pm.
Silent Auction
All works detailed on pages 26 to 57 will be included in the silent auction and be sold to the highest bidder at the end
of the evening. To make a bid in the silent auction, please write your name, telephone number and the price you would
like to pay on the bidding form next to the piece.
Absentee Bidders
If you are unable to attend the event but would like to bid for any of the art works, please fill out the Absentee Bidder
form enclosed and return it to Rebecca Macklin at Macmillan Cancer Support, Special Events, Macmillan De’Longhi Art
Auction, 89 Albert Embankment, London, SE1 7UQ or call 020 7840 4800. In the event of tied bids, priority will be given to
the first received. Absentee bids can be accepted up until the time of the sale, but we would advise submitting them at
your earliest convenience.
Payment
When the live auction has finished, please return your paddle to the registration desk where we will take payment from
you. If you have been successful in the silent auction, please pay at the registration desk or, if you have left The Avenue
by this time, Macmillan will contact you by telephone to take payment after the event. Payment for all auction items can
be made by credit or debit card, cheque or cash.
Collection
All of the art works will be taken down on 2nd October. Once payment has been received, buyers will be given contact
details to arrange delivery through Cadogan Tate, who have generously agreed to deliver the art works at no charge to
any address within central London. Payment for delivery outside London can be made to Cadogan Tate via telephone
using all major credit or debit cards.
6
Miles Aldridge
Artwork title: Le Manège Enchanté #1
Artwork date: 2007
Description: Lambda print, edition 2 of 10
Dimensions: 66.04 x 101.6 cm
Minimum: £3,500
Kindly donated by Miles Aldridge, courtesy of Hamiltons Gallery
Signed, titled and editioned by artist
Miles Aldridge’s images depict a stupendously glossy and magnetically
vibrant world with ultra slick, hyper-lit models and signature acid tones.
Cinematic expression marks Aldridge’s work and it is not surprising
therefore that his dreamlike, erotic style has drawn comparisons with the
work of Bergman, Dali, David Lynch, Hitchcock and Godard amongst
others.
Aldridge, born in 1964, lives and works in London. His work has been
exhibited internationally in both solo and group exhibitions with pieces
residing in many significant public and private collections. Aldridge has
published several books of photographs, most recently: The Cabinet,
2007, with an introduction by Marilyn Manson and Acid Candy, 2008,
with an introduction by Glenn O’Brien. Miles Aldridge: Pictures for
Photographs was published by Steidl in Spring 2009.
7
Sir Peter Blake
Artwork title: Marilyn’s Door
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Silk Screen Print (Artist Proof)
Dimensions: 82 x 59.5 cm
Guide: £900
Kindly donated by Sir Peter Blake
His iconic design for the cover of the Beatles’ album Sgt Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band shot Peter Blake to almost instant fame and he is now
one of Britain’s best known pop artists.
Sir Peter’s fondness for popular culture can be clearly seen in much of
his eclectic collages and silk screen prints. His paintings have included
imagery from advertisements, music hall entertainment, wrestlers,
often including collaged elements. A graduate of the prestigious
Royal Academy in 1956, Blake was included in group exhibitions at the
Institute of Contemporary Arts and had his first solo exhibition in 1960.
8
Adam Dant
Artwork title: The Art of Hedge and The Art of Law
Description: Hand coloured litographs in editions of 50
Dimensions: 76.2 x 55.88 cm
Sold as a pair
Minimum: £1,000
Kindly donated by Adam Dant
Adam Dant lives and works in London. Dant creates dense, cartoon like
drawings, often possessed of a dysfunctional semicircular logic. Mishap
and folly proliferate his work. Museums are common subjects, as are
maps and complicated jokes. Dant’s works often take the form of wall
hung drawings and have been described as Hogarthian or Swiftian
especially in relation to his use of satire. His new work continues Adam
Dant’s interest in depicting and interacting with the public space, the
anecdotal and utopian grand models.
Dant’s drawings can be found in numerous public and private
collections including The Arts Council Collection, The V&A, MOMA
New York, Deutsche Bank, The Museum of London, The Government
Art Collection, The Musee d’Art Contemporain Lyon and San Diego
Museum of Art.
9
Steve Goddard
Artwork title: Untitled
Artwork date: n/a
Description: Pencil and chalk
Dimensions: n/a
Minimum: £3,000
Kindly donated by Steve Goddard
*Represented by The Fine Art Society
Steve Goddard’s work is widely collected internationally. As one of
the most acclaimed portrait painters in Britain, he has won numerous
awards for his realist work. Although an amazingly gifted draftsman, it
is his looser and more primitive work that interests him the most offering
him flexibility to explore line, texture, colour and media to recreate his
memories and dreams.
He takes inspiration from social and cultural history, tribalism, and South
American popular culture, as well as contemporary and ancient textiles,
fabrics, frames and artefacts. His interest in texture is reflected in the
customised frames that are intrinsic to his work.
This artwork is of Cy, Goddard’s son aged six months letting out a
piercing scream. With Goddard the subject matter is always something
personal which gets his blood up, something that captures his
imagination and plays havoc with his emotion. Goddard’s biggest
passions are his sons, football and his art, making this a very important
piece.
10
Maggi Hambling
Artwork title: Summer Wave Breaking
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Ink and acrylic on paper
Dimensions: 12 x 15 cm
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Maggi Hambling
Born in Suffolk in 1945, Maggi Hambling is a distinguished painter and
sculptor whose work can be seen in the British Museum, National
Gallery, National Portrait Gallery, Tate Collection, The Gulbenkian
Foundation, Lisbon and many other public collections in the UK and
abroad.
Her sculpture ‘A Conversation with Oscar Wilde’ was unveiled in central
London in 1998, and ‘Scallop’ for Benjamin Britten was installed on
Aldeburgh beach in 2003. In 1995 she shared the Jerwood Painting Prize
with Patrick Caulfield and in 2005 ‘Scallop’ was awarded the first Marsh
Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture.
Maggi’s series of ‘North Sea paintings’ began in November 2002 and
continues, this recent work belongs to the series.
11
Alison Jackson
Artwork title: Queen in Marigolds
Artwork date: 2006
Description: Chromogenic print, Edition 1 of 5
Dimensions: 40.75 x 30 cm
Minimum: £2,800
Kindly donated by Alison Jackson, courtesy of Hamiltons Gallery
Alison Jackson is a contemporary artist who shows her work in galleries
and museums as well as to a wider audience through the media of
mass communication, these have included TV programmes, films,
advertising campaigns and books.
Books featuring her work are entitled Confidential (Taschen) and Private
(Penguin). In 2002 Alison was awarded a BAFTA for Innovation for her
television series DoubleTake and in 2004 she was given the ICP Infinity
Award for Photography.
12
Sam Jackson
Artwork title: Slow, Sad and Beautiful
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Oil on board
Dimensions: 30 x 30 cm
Minimum: £1,500
Kindly donated by Sam Jackson and Zavier Ellis, Director,
CHARLIESMITHLondon
Sam Jackson works at an intimate scale, making paintings that are
typically no less than 10cm in height or width and no more than 60 x
60 cm. His subject matter draws on traditional genres of the portrait,
nude and still life. However, his work is contextualised very much within
the contemporary arena. Painted in dark umbers and ochres with
varying degrees of varnish on board, these delicate works have an Old
Masterly quality whilst the subject matter jars with haunting, melancholy,
aggressive and/or sexually explicit depictions.
Jackson has a raw energy that translates into diminutive, powerful
paintings that hover between form and line; characterisation and
ambiguity; time and timelessness; violence and transgression.
13
Sacha Jafri
Artwork Title: 100yrs Ashes Painting (commissioned by the ECB to
Officially Celebrate 100 years of Ashes History including the 2009
series).
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Oil and printing ink on canvas Artist Proof painting
with 35 hand-prints and signatures of the top Australian and
English ‘Ashes Legends’ from the 1950s to the present day.
Dimensions: 150 x 180 cm
Minimum: £30,000
Current official value: £70,000 – £85,000
Kindly donated by Sacha Jafri (includes three hand-signed bats
from Aussie legends: Chappel, Warne and Ponting)
This large scale (150 x 180 cm) oil on canvas Artist Proof painting has
been created by Sacha over the last six months and depicts the history
of one of the greatest rivalries in sport. It contains 35 hand-prints and
signatures of the Ashes greatest ever players from both Australia and
England from the 1950s to the present day (including: Ponting, Strauss,
Flintoff, Warne, Botham, Benaud, Border, Pietersen, Lee, Vaughn, Brearley,
McGrath, Chappel, Waugh, Gower, Broad, Gough, Gatting, etc.)
The painting itself depicts predominantly London, Melbourne, Sydney
and Manchester, capturing all the most significant moments, both high
and low, throughout the last 100 years of Ashes history - it also contains
newspaper clippings and headlines throughout this period.
This is the second painting Sacha has been commissioned to paint,
the first (July 2009) sold for $175,000 but did not include the 2009
Ashes Victory, this 2nd painting now does include this epic victory and
completes this extraordinary piece of artistic and sporting memorabilia.
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Sacha Jafri
2008 saw Sacha Jafri as the youngest artist in history to be offered a
Museum-Based 10 year Retrospective World Tour, and now at 32 he is
widely considered one of the top young painters on the world scene.
Having beaten Damien Hirst to top spot in an auction last year in
London, and having just finished an unprecedented world tour sell out
show with a lost Warhol collection entitled ‘Jafri meets Warhol’ - he has
recently be described by the Financial and New York Times as ‘a shrewd
investment who’s prices are set to soar!’ His client list includes: Kevin
Spacey, Jude Law, Bill Gates, Philip Green, Madonna, HRH Prince Charles,
Sir Alex Ferguson, Sir Michael Parkinson, David Beckham, Lewis Hamilton,
Leonardo DiCaprio, Prince Albert of Monaco and Sienna Miller.
Sacha has raised over six million pounds for various charitable causes
world-wide over the last 5 years with his work, and 2010 sees him being
added to HM Queen Elizabeth II’s honours list for an MBE. He is also
being bestowed with the extreme honour, an invitation to join HE
Mr.Nelson Mandella’s 21st Century Leaders, along with such luminaries
as Desmond Tutu, Bill Clinton, Sir Bob Geldoff, Sir Richard Branson, Sir Paul
McCartney, Oprah Winfrey, Bono, George Clooney, Pierce Brosnan, Sir
Michael Caine, Brad Pitt, and Denzel Washington etc.
With two major commissions for 2010: to paint the official London 2012
Olympic Painting and a commission by HRH The Prince of Wales, Barack
Obama and King Abdullah of Jordan’s ‘Mosaic’ to paint the 21 ‘Most
Influential Living Muslims’ including such luminaries as: Mohammed
Ali, Zinedine Zidane, HH Sheikh Mohammed, Queen Rania, The Emir of
Qatar, Prince Alwaleed Alsaud etc, Sacha’s original works now regularly
fetch in excess of $450,000 with his Artist’s Proofs going for as much as
$60,000.
As the first artist to ever feature on the front cover of the Financial Times
magazine and with up and coming shows at: The Met New York, The
Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, The Islamic Museum Qatar, Berlin Institute, The
MOMA, Miami art Basel, the Venice Biennale, The Arts House Singapore,
The Sharjah Biennale and the Serpentine, Sacha Jafri is certainly – ‘The
One to Watch!’
www.sachajafri.com
15
Annie Kevans
Artwork title: Marie Garon (Pauline Garon)
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Oil on paper
Dimensions: 50 x 40 cm
Minimum: £2,500
Kindly donated by Annie Kevans
Between 1922 and 1934 the Western Association of Motion Picture
Advertisers elected 13 starlets or ‘WAMPAS Baby Stars’. As Photoplay
Magazine noted in 1925, “…the selection was made, not on what
the girls have done in the past, but on their prospects for the future.
They are all beginners whose latent talent and beauty have attracted
the attention of the men who acquaint the outside world with the
personalities of filmland’s capital.”
The girls were given new identities, then presented to the world at the
annual ‘WAMPAS Frolic’, where their all American beauty could be
celebrated and idealised.
Although Joan Crawford, Mary Astor and Fay Wray became Hollywood
hits, most Baby Stars were not destined for stardom. Of the 143
girls, most were unable to pursue careers in the ‘talkies’ and rapidly
disappeared from public consciousness. Today, their images remain lost
in Hollywood archives.
16
Francesca Lowe
Artwork title: Malaise 2007
Artwork date: 2007
Description: Acrylic Ink and Gesso on linen
Dimensions: 59 x 61 cm
Minimum: £3,000
Kindly donated by Francesca Lowe
Since graduating from The Royal Academy in 2004, Francesca has
exhibited widely both nationally and internationally in China, USA and
the Netherlands.
Donated from her private collection, Francesca Lowe’s painting
“Malaise” originally featured in the artist’s solo exhibition “Terminus”, at
Riflemaker in 2007. “Terminus” fused Victorian preaching-maps with art
symbolism. It investigated the potential of a secret moral guidance
system at work behind the structure of a fairground, inviting the viewer
to indulge visually and mentally in a game of allegorical unravelling, as
they grapple with what it means to be human.
Inspired by archaic soap adverts and 1940s political posters but painted
like a fairground side stall, “Malaise” both celebrates and exorcises that
mild fug that lingers in our midst.
Francesca Lowe is represented by Beak Street’s “Riflemaker”, London.
17
Mary McCartney
Artwork title: Sheila and the Director
Artwork date: January 2007
Description: Photograph
Dimensions: 40.64 x 50.8 cm
Minimum: £600
Kindly donated by Mary McCartney
Mary McCartney began taking photographs professionally in 1992.
Since then, she has developed a particular interest in portrait and
fashion photography. Portraits she has taken include Sam Taylor-Wood,
Ralph Fiennes, Jude Law, and of her sister, Stella McCartney.
Her first public exhibition was titled Off Pointe: A Photographic Study of
the Royal Ballet After Hours. It shows the contrast between the grueling
and often painful everyday lives of the cast and their storybook
performances.
18
Miho Sato
Artwork title: Moomin3
Artwork date: 2005
Description: Acrylic on board
Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm
Minimum: £2,500
Kindly donated by Miho Sato, courtesy of Domo Baal Gallery
Miho Sato was born in Japan and lives and works in London. An award
winning artist, Sato attended the Royal Academy Schools in London.
In discussing her work Sato explains, “Sometimes my life sinks into the
world of images as if they are like the sky that you just accept as being
there as a fact of nature. At other times I do not know what it is I see and
then there is a sense of everything appearing as completely unnatural.
Also, sometimes my work appears light and humorous and sometimes
as dark and heavy. I do not feel it is possible to control how we might
be seen or indeed see. Painting is just a process of bringing such
differences into the open.”
19
John Stark
Artwork title: Cave of Gold
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Oil on wood panel
Dimensions: 61 x 50 cm
Minimum: £3,500
Kindly donated by John Stark
John’s practice attempts to trace how myths and legends have been
used to make sense of the world and understand human nature
through metaphysical investigation. It is a ceremonial exploration of the
hermetic labyrinth where the dead stuff of paint becomes charged.
John Stark sees his practice as a ‘call to the wild’ and an attempt to
return to a perennial wisdom of imaginative insight that potentially
restores us to our own true selves.
20
Gavin Turk
Artwork Title: Turk Love RGB
Description: Silkscreen on somerset paper (non editioned artist
proof)
Dimensions: 37 x 38 cm
Minimum: £1,000
Kindly donated by Gavin Turk
*Represented by White Cube/Jay Jopling
From an English Heritage plaque memorializing his presence at art
school to wry paintings of his own signature, Gavin Turk has made a
career from exploring the idea of originality in art. Paradoxically, this
questioning has made him one of the most original young british artists,
which has lead to his work being shown in such major public spaces
as London’s Tate Modern, the Saatchi Gallery and the Victoria & Albert
Museum.
A London based artist, Turk has participated in several important group
exhibitions such as Istanbul Biennial (1999), ‘Century City’, Tate Modern,
London (2001), ‘Remix: Contemporary Art and Pop’, Tate Liverpool
(2002) and ‘Coollustre’, Collection Lambert en Avignon (2003). Solo
exhibitions include South London Gallery (1998), Sensation, Royal
Academy of Arts (1997), Centre d’Art Contemporain in Geneva (2000),
The New Art Gallery, Walsall (2002) and Schloss Eggenberg, Graz (2006).
21
Gavin Turk
Artwork Title: Pollockoffee
Description: Bespoke designed De’Longhi PrimaDonna machine
Dimensions: 28.5 x 42 x 38 cm
Minimum: £3,000
Kindly donated by Gavin Turk / De’Longhi
Gavin was commissioned to create a one-off original, bespoke design
on the exterior of a De’Longhi PrimaDonna coffee machine.
As the Pollockoffee is an original piece of artwork, the successful bidder
will also receive a De’Longhi PrimaDonna Bean-to-Cup coffee machine
(valued at £1,000) so they can enjoy delicious coffee in their own home
at the touch of a button.
22
Jack Vettriano
Artwork title: Beautiful Dreamer
Artwork date: Published in 2005
Description: Signed, limited edition giclee print
Dimensions: 106.68 x 88.9 cm
Minimum: £875
Kindly donated by Jack Vettriano OBE
This print is from an edition published in 2005 and it is signed by Jack
Vettriano. Jack will sign and inscribe the reverse of the frame for the
successful bidder, should they want a personal inscription.
The original painting, ‘Beautiful Dreamer’, is in a private collection in
New York. For more information about Jack Vettriano, please visit www.
jackvettriano.com
23
Stephen Walter
Artwork title: City of London
Artwork date: 2008
Description: Archival ink jet and screen prints on hand torn
fine art paper, signed and editioned by the artist. Edition of
50. Published by TAG Fine Arts
Dimensions: Paper size 24 x 57 cm, framed 34 x 67 cm
Minimum: £600
Kindly donated by TAG Fine Arts
24
Aptly described by the London born and based artist Stephen Walter
RCA as, ‘a celebration of an unfolding drama based in reality, a place
that we are all part of and can relate to‘, The Island Series took two
years to complete. From a distance, the print looks like an old historical
map; however, on closer inspection the piece focuses on local place
name histories, the artist choosing to highlight etymologies spanning
from pre-Christian times to the present day. The artist has re-drawn all of
London’s 32 boroughs.
Jonathan Yeo
Artwork title: Falling Leaves
Artwork date: July 2009
Description: Mixed media collage
Dimensions: 46.5 x 46.5 cm
Minimum: £2,000
Kindly donated by Jonathan Yeo
Jonathan Yeo is a figurative painter well known for his portraits of
iconic figures including Dennis Hopper, Erin O’Connor and Tony Blair.
More recently he has been working in collage and last year became
embroiled in a controversy surrounding his pornographic portrait of
George W Bush.
The piece here uses the same medium but in a more subtle way. The
delicate autumn leaves in this picture, on closer inspection, reveal a
multitude of sins.
25
Ernest Bachrach
Artwork title: Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman
for Notorious (RKO Pictures, 1946)
Artwork date: 1946
Description: Modern print from original 10 x 8 negative held in the
John Kobal Foundation archive.
Dimensions: 40.64 x 50.8 cm
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by the John Kobal Foundation
Ernest Bachrach, one of the great Hollywood portrait photographers,
was head of the stills department at RKO Pictures from 1929 to 1958
and during that time photographed many of the great film stars. He is
particularly remembered for his portraits of Katherine Hepburn and Cary
Grant.
26
Michael Birt
Artwork title: Harrison Ford
Artwork date: 1999
Description: Photograph
Dimensions: 20 x 16 cm
Minimum: £550
Kindly donated by Michael Birt
Harrison Ford, Actor - New York, 24 May, 1999
Harrison Ford had requested that when he came into the studio, he be
left alone for coffee and to have his hair cut with his own groomer. For a
while this did create a “them and us” situation but he snapped into life
for the photograph. Sometime later at a dinner party he was apparently
seen to mimic the pose in this photograph.
27
Gordon Cheung
Artwork title: Mother (study)
Description: Description: Laser etching, Stock listings on plywood –
Trial proof for an edition of 10 with 2 artist proofs
Dimensions: 20.5 x 17.5cm
Minimum: £800
Kindly donated by Gordon Cheung
Gordon Cheung, born in 1975, is a well-respected artist represented
by international galleries including the Jack Shainman Gallery New
York and the Alan Cristea Gallery in London. His works are also in
international public and private collections including the Hirshhorn
Museum, Whitworth Museum, ASU Art Museum, The New Art Gallery
Walsall, Hiscox Collection, Progressive Arts Collection and UBS Collection.
He has received a series of awards throughout the years, with the latest
being the Jerwood Contemporary Painters award won in 2008.
28
Gayle Chong Kwan
Artwork title: ‘Skara Brae’, ‘Senscape Scotland’ (series), 2009
(artist’s print) Artwork date: 2009
Dimensions: 76.2 x 101.6 cm
Description: Artist’s print, c-type lambda print, one in a series of six
works, 1/10 edition
Minimum: £700 (unframed)
Kindly donated by Gayle Chong Kwan
Gayle Chong Kwan works with large-format photography, video, sound,
installation, and performance. Her work is often context specific, creates
temporary communities or involves people in rituals of exchange, such
as food or trade, to explore ideas of history, the senses and memory. The
personal and global politics of food, trade and tourism have been a
major focus of Chong Kwan’s work to date. Chong Kwan is based in London and has shown extensively in the
UK and abroad, including: ‘Tales from the New World’, 10th Havana
Biennial, Cuba; ‘Terroir and the Pathetic Fallacy’, ArtSway, New Forest,
UK; ‘At Your Service’, David Roberts Foundation, London; ‘Pot Luck’, New
Art Gallery, Walsall, UK; ‘Memoryscape Moravia’, Centro Cultural de
Moravia, Medellin, Colombia; ‘New London School in Berlin’ at Galerie
Schuster, Berlin; Government Art Fund’, British Ambassador’s Residence,
Paris.
29
Josh Cole
Artwork title: Pitbull Ballet
Artwork date: May 2009
Description: A set of 3 photographic prints hand-printed by the
artist. This is one of five sets produced
Dimensions: all 50.8 x 60.96 cm
Sold as a set
Minimum: £800
Kindly donated by Josh Cole
Starting out as a hip-hop photographer, Josh Cole now shoots gritty
street photography featuring gang members, graffiti artists, gypsies,
break-dancers and the homeless. He also earns his living shooting stills
for the advertising and fashion industry. See more at www.joshcole.
co.uk.
Apart from his commercial work, Josh is also involved in youth-work and
uses his valuable spare time to put together projects for addicts and
young offenders. He also designed a workshop for young offenders
which he ran in Camden and which finished with an exhibition curated
by David Bailey.
30
Keith Coventry
Artwork Title: Crack Girls
Artwork date: 2006
Description: Silkscreen print, edition 120
Dimensions: 29.7 x 42 cm
Minimum: £100
Kindly donated by Keith Coventry
Keith Coventry is best known for his seemingly abstract paintings of
council estates, paintings that can be read as an indictment of the
utopian Modernist visions of the early twentieth century artist, Malevich.
One series of paintings, white squares on a white background, are
entitled “Crack City”. Coventry’s concerns with the social ills of urban
living, the underbelly of city life, are mirrored in his series of bronze
“Crack Pipes”, which addressed the microcosm of city life, honing in on
individual lifestyles.
His works are included in a number of important collections, both in
Britain and the U.S., including Tate and MoMA, New York. His white
paintings were displayed at Brit Art 5 at the Saatchi gallery and were
included in ‘Sensation’ at the Royal Academy in 1997.
31
Hugo Dalton
Artwork title: Ksenia
Artwork date: 2008
Description: Etched glass Gobo, projector
Dimensions: Variable
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Hugo Dalton
Hugo Dalton graduated with First Class honors from Goldsmith’s College
in 2002. The artist is best known for his ‘wall drawings’, an age-old genre
that he is constantly reinventing. His work is firmly rooted in the tradition
of drawing from life, using modern materials and techniques to achieve
subtle and striking artworks.
The artist’s latest illuminated drawings use light display systems
appropriated from the corporate sector. The works exist in the form of a
tiny ‘Gobo’, an acid etched disc, through which the light shines onto
a surface. The drawing becomes instantly malleable, at home on the
wall, the floor, the ceiling or garden. Dalton will be creating a set for the
world premiere of a new work by Christopher Wheeldon / Morphoses at
Sadlers wells in October 2009 formed from his lightdrawings.
For further information visit: www.hugodalton.com
32
Attributed to Ken Danvers
Artwork title: Elizabeth Taylor for Suddenly Last Summer, Columbia
Pictures, 1959
Artwork date: 1959
Description: Modern silver print made from original 10 x 8 negative
in the archive of The John Kobal Foundation
Dimensions: 40.64 x 50.8 cm
Minimum: £750
Kindly donated by the John Kobal Foundation
It is not known with any certainty who actually took this iconic portrait of
Elizabeth Taylor posing in character for Suddenly Last Summer. The late
Ken Danvers did take some stills for the film but there is no record as to
whether he photographed this particular session.
33
Jillian Edelstein
Artwork title: Sangoma
Artwork date: 2002
Description: Limited Edition ink pigment print. David from the
Sangoma series 2002 - 2007, the traditional healers who live, heal
and train in the mountains on the Lesotho/South African border
Dimensions: 16 x 20 cm
Minimum: £1,050
Kindly donated by Jillian Edelstein
London based photographer Jillian Edelstein’s portraits have appeared
in many publications including The New Yorker, The New York Times
Magazine, Vanity Fair, Vogue and Interview.
She has received several awards including Photographers Gallery
Portrait Photographer of the Year Award 1990, the Visa d’Or at the
International Festival of Photojournalism in Perpignan in 1997, the
European Final Art Polaroid Award in 1999 and the John Kobal Book
Award 2003.
Between 1996 and 2002 she travelled to South Africa frequently to
document the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Her
award-winning book Truth and Lies, shot in large format, was published
by Granta in 2002. Her photographs have been exhibited internationally
at venues including the National Portrait Gallery, The Photographers
Gallery, The Royal Academy New Art Space, the Tom Blau Gallery in
London, the Recontres Internationales de la Photographie in Arles,
France and the Bensusan Museum, Johannesburg.
34
Rosie Emerson
Artwork title: No 2, legs and Drawers series
Artwork date: December 2008
Description: Limited Edition print
Dimensions: 181 x 85 cm
Minimum: £1,300
Kindly donated by Rosie Emerson
Since graduating in 2004, Rosie Emerson has taken part in numerous
exhibitions in the UK as well as international shows in Switzerland, Israel
and California.
Her drawings ‘Legs and Drawers’ juxtapose burlesque dancers
with ornamental furniture. The Drawings reference the aesthetics of
advertising creating works which are seductive whilst also offering a
subtle critique on the objectification of the female form in the images
we experience in the everyday.
Rosie lives and works in East London. She is currently working on 15
newly commissioned works for a corporate collection and will be
opening her studio as part of Hackney Wicked Arts Festival.
35
Emily Forgot
Artwork Title: Dorothy
Artwork date: October 2008
Description: Digital Giclee Print , Edition 15 , signed and numbered
by the artist. This piece is printed on Somerset Enhanced which is
made from 100% cotton is acid free and archival
Dimensions: 84.1 x 59.4 cm
Minimum: £200
Kindly donated by Emily Forgot and Thick and Thin
Emily Forgot is the appropriately curious moniker of one of London’s
brightest young things. Aged 25, Miss Forgot is an artist, entrepreneur
and popular character amongst the creative social scenes of East
London.
Brought up in Sheffield by a curator father and a very French mother,
she is known for developing her own interdisciplinary visual language,
which embraces the odd, the everyday and the sometimes surreal.
Emily prides herself on approaching all briefs with creative thought,
originality, humour and beauty in mind whether the work is a
commissioned piece or a flight of her own fancy.
36
Richard Foster
Artwork title: Untitled
Artwork date: August 2009
Description: Giclée on watercolour paper, mounted on
aluminium
Dimensions: 59.43 x 59.43 cm
Minimum: £100
Kindly donated by Richard Foster / De’Longhi
Richard Foster’s successful career has already spanned 20 years and
doesn’t appear to be letting up. His determination and passion for a
challenge has led to recent work with clients including Gucci, Burberry,
Dunhill and Patek Philippe, and while his photography continues to
progress, his interests in the moving image have come to the fore.
37
Alex Gene Morrison
Artwork title: The First Tree
Artwork date: 2007
Description: Oil and linen
Dimensions: 215 x 154 cm
Minimum: £2,000
Kindly donated by Alex Gene Morrison
A flux of multi layered references flip from dream-like beauty and
lightness to nightmarish melancholia. A hypnotic, sickly sweet aesthetic
is consistent; as is a sense of the uncanny or otherness. There is also
a sense of renewal, creation, metamorphosis and therefore perhaps
evolution. All of this essentially occurs within a timeless, virtual, alternate
universe that reflects our own present. Alex Gene Morrison was born in
1975. He studied painting at the RCA from 2000-2002.
Alex shows regularly, both nationally and internationally.
38
Fergus Greer
Artwork title: Session IV, Look 24, Aug 91 & Session IV,
Look 21, Aug 91
Artwork date: August 1991
Description: Photographs
Dimensions: 30.48 x 35.56 cm, 30.48 x 30.48 cm
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Fergus Greer
Fergus Greer, a leading international photographer, studied at St
Martin’s School of Art, London. He began his photographic career as
an assistant for photographers including Richard Avedon and later as
studio manager to Terence Donovan. As a freelance photographer,
he worked for a variety of magazines, regularly shooting covers for The
Sunday Times Magazine. He moved to Los Angeles in 1997 and spent
ten years there working for many leading magazines before returning to
London where he set up a studio in Chelsea. As an officially accredited
war artist he documented the war in Kosovo, publishing a book of these
photographs in 2001. He collaborated with the Australian performance
artist Leigh Bowery to produce Leigh Bowery Looks: Photographs 19881994 (2001).
39
James Jessop
Artwork title: Tek33 the Trident Gambler
Artwork date: 2005
Description: Aluminum paint on blue pvc
Dimensions: 150 x 200 cm
Minimum: £2,500
Kindly donated by James Trimmer
James Jessop burst onto the art scene with his huge painting ‘Horrific’,
part of Charles Saatchi’s ‘New Blood’ exhibition at The Saatchi Gallery
London 2004. Jessop leaves his nocturnal tracks all over London. His
famous trademark tag symbol can be found dripping and dancing
across tonight’s featured auction painting, (look for the ‘Trident’).
Jessop began spraying on walls aged eleven and never stopped.
In 1999 Jessop graduated from the Royal College of Art London with
an MA in Painting. He has exhibited internationally with solo shows at
Galeria Thomas Cohn, Sao Paulo in 2008 and Galleri Tom Christoffersen
Copenhagen in 2009.Jessop’s largest paintings (250x340cm) currently
sell for up to £14,000 internationally.
James Jessop is represented by Sartorial Contemporary Art London.
40
Reece Jones
Artwork title: An Event at an Ox Bow
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Unique mono print and stencilled aquatint on paper
Dimensions: 59 x 51 cm
Minimum: £400
Kindly donated by Reece Jones
Reece Jones is better known for using a complicated process of
application and erasure to create haunting, indefinable charcoal
drawings. These hybrid environments evoke twisted and subversive
narratives whilst continuing Jones’ investigation into the formal potential
of methodology and image making. Combining two conflicting
methods, the unique prints such as ‘An Event at an Ox Bow’ are typical
of these invented landscapes which juxtapose the known and logical
with surreal spectacle.
Reece Jones lives and works in London and is represented by All Visual
Arts.
41
Stephen Jones
Artwork title: Louvre
Artwork date: Spring/Summer 2009
Dimensions: 10 x 30 x 30 cm
Description: Veiled crin tricorn hat
Minimum: £285
Kindly donated by Stephen Jones, Millinary
Top milliner Stephen Jones donated this hat from his Spring/Summer
2009 collection, ‘Vanda.’ The piece was inspired by his research for the
exhibition ‘Hats: An Anthology by Stephen Jones’ which was on show at
the V&A museum from the 24th February – 31st May 2009.
42
Hugh Mendes
Artwork title: Obituary: Jade Goody
Artwork date: 1st June 2009
Description: Oil on Linen
Dimensions: 20 x 35 cm
Minimum: £400
Kindly donated by Hugh Mendes
Hugh Mendes has been painting images of newspaper clippings for
seven years now. They recall trompe l’oile 17th century still life/vanitas.
Recently, Hugh has been working on an ongoing series of obituaries.
They condense a life into a few column inches and a single image – a
scrap of newsprint that becomes a heavy token, a memento, even
an icon, when rendered in paint. The act of painting and therefore
sustained concentration brings a degree of focus and depth to what
would otherwise be fleeting moments in the press.
This piece was painted especially for the Macmillan De’Longhi Art
Auction.
43
Joanna Mallin-Davies
Artwork title: Venus Dancing
Artwork date: 2003
Description: Sculpture, artist proof of an edition of 12
Dimensions: 43.18 x 15.24 x 12.7 cm
Minimum: £1,150
Kindly donated by Joanna Mallin-Davies
This piece, as with much of Joanna’s work, is a celebration of life.
A beautiful, abundant, woman, a Venus, dancing in joy of her
contentment with herself.
44
Jamie McCartney
Artwork title: The Impossibility of Passion
Artwork date: 2009
Description: 5/12 limited edition bronze on a stone base
Dimensions: 38.1cm high
Minimum: £900
Kindly donated by Jamie McCartney
Attracting the attention of collectors worldwide, this is an artist to watch.
Continuing his exploration of neo-surrealist themes, McCartney’s
enigmatic figurine is characteristically challenging yet beautiful. Her
pose suggests a passionate argument but this is not possible. She
disturbs the eye, yet remains strangely sexy. Herein lies the power of the
piece as your response to her as a woman, as a passionate woman, is
at odds with her physiognomy. One can only admire, never kiss, never
talk to, never make love to. She is sexy but without sex.
A miniature of McCartney’s 2008 life-sized piece by the same title.
45
Brendan Neiland
Artwork title: Sassy Sally (Las Vegas Suite)
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Acrylic on Paper
Dimensions: 24.13 x 16.51 cm
Minimum: £1,000
Kindly donated by Brendan Neiland and the Redfern Gallery
Brendan Neiland is one of Britain’s foremost contemporary painters and
printmakers represented in major museums and galleries worldwide
and in Britain, The Victoria and Albert Museum, The Tate Gallery London,
The Collections of the British Council and the Arts Council of Great
Britain.
He has created some of the most memorable images of modern
metropolitan existence. His work has been commissioned by leading
commercial companies, public service institutions and education
establishments and has been the subject of several television
documentaries and video programmes.
This painting is one of a series of five resulting from a visit to Las Vegas.
46
Gavin Nolan
The piece on this page is an example of the artist’s work.
The piece which will be auctioned off was being commissioned
at the time of print.
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Gavin Nolan
Nolan’s unsettling portraits stray at the edges of hyper-realism,
his subjects’ outlines blurred by the surreal. Informed by a slue of
popular media, from album covers to gossip magazines, as well as
the Old Masters and the people around him, Nolan’s work is entirely
contemporary in its aesthetic yet remains imbued with a traditional
sophistication. Like scenes from a party overstayed, where the wired
enthusiasm of others simultaneously lures and disgusts; Nolan’s
paintings depict self-indulgence embraced and rejected, both a
celebration and critique of all that is loved and loathed: fashion,
beauty, money, celebrity, power and religion.
47
Philippa Richardson
Artwork title: Seascape
Artwork date: November 2008
Description: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 100 x 100 cm
Minimum: £800
Kindly donated by Philippa Richardson
Philippa Richardson has enjoyed success at a variety of exhibitions in
London, Surrey and Cornwall. Her most recent work can be viewed
online at www.philipparichardson.co.uk.
Philippa Richardson graduated as a scholarship student from
Manchester University (affliated to Sotheby’s London) in 1999 with a 2:1
BA Hons Degree in Fine and Decorative Art. She subsequently attended
Chelsea and Camberwell Art school, London.
Philippa Richardson lives and works in Surrey, where she continues to
pursue her career as an artist and she regularly exhibits at the Red
Biddy Gallery, Guildford. Her favourite subjects include seascapes,
landscapes, people and animals, her preferred media being oils.
48
Kim Rugg
Artwork title: That’s Enough Hope I’m Off to Work
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Newsprint – The Daily Telegraph
Dimensions: 57.5 x 38 cm
Minimum: £2,500
Kindly donated by Kim Rugg
Kim is interested in exploring and exploiting the space between an
image and its interpretation by subverting and deconstructing the
message then reconstructing it with a new code to force the viewers
to reconsider their perception of the messenger, the object behind the
message.
With her Newspaper series, she maintains the familiar layout and design
of the original and reorganises the text in an alphanumerical code
referring to original printing techniques to reinforce the physical nature
of the letters and symbols
The newspaper in this work is The Daily Telegraph from January 2009. The
big story was the inauguration of president Obama and the photo is of
the First Family.
49
Rob Ryan
Artwork title: I Opened My Heart
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Exclusive TAG limited edition silkscreen print of 25,
signed and numbered in pencil by the artist
Dimensions: Image size 51 x 37 cm, paper size 68 x 51 cm
Minimum: £800
Kindly donated by TAG Fine Arts
Ryan studied fine art at Nottingham Trent Polytechnic before going
on to an MA in printmaking at the RCA. A highly acclaimed illustrator,
Ryan’s elaborate paper cuts have appeared in collaborations with
Liberty, Paul Smith, Tatty Devine, Vogue and now illustrate his book, This Is
For You, a fairy tale told through hand cut pieces of paper. In 2009, Ryan
had a residency exhibition with Ernest Sewn in New York.
50
Olympia Scarry
Artwork title: Still from Performance “Novicane”
Artwork date: June 2009
Description: n/a
Dimensions: 50.8 x 40.64 cm
Minimum: £1,500
Kindly donated by Olympia Scarry
Olympia Scarry’s work reveals vulnerability, inner chaos and her attempt
to solve her compulsive interpersonal relations. Scarry’s choice of
materials reflect the complexities of the ever contradicting role reversal
of power in relationships through her industrial black rubber cables
encased in fragile glass, the 750 kilos of skin-like pure soap upon sharp
edged stainless butcher’s steel and the delicate bandages hanging
from metal chains.
Scarry finished her BA in Psychology in 2007 and her fascination in the
human psychosis is the driving force in her works. For this performance
piece Scarry chose the human body as the instrument to express
the fears of letting someone in emotionally as well as physically and
therefore revealing the numbness one feeds oneself in order not to
hurt and yet embodying the dying, longing force to be loved. Alone,
Protected. Safe from the unknown.
Olympia Scarry’s “AfterMath” performance piece is on show in Venice
Arsenale Novissimo until November 2009 at the Unconditional Love
show.
51
Olivia Stanton
Artwork title: Vendange 2
Artwork date: 1995
Description: Oil on canvas on board
Dimensions: 87 x 79 cm
Minimum: £1,690
Kindly donated by Olivia Stanton and Gallery 286
Olivia Stanton studied painting in the early 1970s at the Byam Shaw
School of Art in London and has exhibited regularly since then in
Britain and France. Her work is landscape-based, but betrays a leaning
towards abstraction which tightens the structure of her paintings
substantially. This, coupled with a sophisticated understanding of colour
used both descriptively and decoratively, accounts for the strength of
her work. She draws with lyrical precision and has a real feeling for paint.
52
Sam Taylor-Wood
Artwork title: Falling VI
Artwork date: 2004
Description: 20/25 AP C-Print (edition of 75)
Dimensions: 16 x 12 cm
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Sam Taylor-Wood
The Falling series continues the artist’s exploration into the physical and
emotional limits of individuals operating in contemporary society. Often
using subversive or enigmatic images, Taylor-Wood exposes extreme
psychological and physical states – joy and despair, screaming and
muteness, religious ecstasy and emotional release, presence and
absence. With the Falling series, Taylor-Wood looks at notions of weight
and gravity in elegiac, poised photographs.
53
James Trimmer
Artwork title: Young Roebuck with Rough Tubes
Artwork date: 2008
Description: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 180 x 210 cm
Minimum: £2,000
Kindly donated by James Trimmer
James is a practicing artist who works with and creates images that
explore the relationship humans and animals share and what this tells
us about ourselves. His work also takes an interest in the strange sense
of beauty present in violence and death when viewed by a removed
spectator.
James studied painting at Brighton University and has just completed
a postgraduate at the Prince’s Drawing School in London. James has
exhibited in group shows in the UK as well as in Boston and Halifax, Nova
Scotia, and is due to exhibit in Berlin over the summer.
54
David Walker
Artwork title: Unknown
Artwork date: 2009
Description: Spray paint on canvas
Dimension: 61 x 77 cm
Minimum: £600
Kindly donated by David Walker
Primarily working with portraiture and using only spray paint, David
Walker’s ability to capture his subject in his unique style has attracted a
keen group of collectors who have acquired his work at auction, gallery
sales and by commission.
David has exhibited in the UK and internationally alongside Nick Walker,
Goldie, Inkie plus many more and his work at Banksy’s Cans 2 Festival
was noted as a highlight.
55
Michael Woods
Artwork title: Norfolk Landscape
Artwork date: Summer 2008
Description: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 60.96 x 60.96 cm
Minimum: £500
Kindly donated by Michael Woods
Over the years, Woods’ style of painting has changed considerably and
throughout his further and college education his style followed a path
between impressionist and realism. Some of his earlier work, pointillist in
style, was shown at the Richard Hagen Gallery in Broadway. Now, his
work is abstract based. He has always been a great admirer of Patrick
Heron and Mark Rothko. After a trip to Australia and New Zealand in
1998 where he was greatly influenced by extremes in the colours and
light he found his work taking on a more abstract style.
Many of his ideas are based on the world around us, landscape, sea
and the elements. Our world is made up of so many abstract and
diverse shapes and Woods tries to use and develop these in his work.
Colour also plays an important and exciting part in the creation of
each piece of artwork.
56
Emily Young
Artwork title: ‘Time in the Stone’ (book), ‘Onyx Lunar Disc’
Artwork date: 2007
Description: Limited edition book with original artwork Onyx Lunar
disc 2007
Dimensions: Disc 20 cm diameter, Book 33.8 x 26.8 x 2.4 cm inside
a 10 cm deep box
Minimum: £800
Kindly donated by Emily Young
Emily Young was born in London and spent her youth there and in
Rome and Wiltshire. As a young woman, in the late sixties and early
70’s, she travelled widely, living in the USA, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India,
France and Italy, and visiting Africa, South America and the middle
east.
She has permanent installations at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew.
The Imperial War Museum, St Paul’s Churchyard, London, The Close at
Salisbury Cathedral and La Defence in Paris.
The successful bidder will also receive a specially produced and
patinated bronze stand for the disc.
57
Thank you to the following people for their support
in helping this auction become a reality…
Blow Creative - Nicholas Feurtado for designing this catalogue,
invitations, reply card, postcards and tickets free of charge.
www.blowcreative.co.uk
Cadogan Tate for kindly collecting, delivering and storing all the
artwork free of charge.
www.cadogantate.com
Charlotte Tolhurst for generously taking the photos for this
catalogue free of charge.
www.charlottetolhurst.com
Christie’s - Deborah Allan for providing value advice on the works
of art and Nick Martineau for being an outstanding auctioneer.
www.christies.co.uk
Christina Leder Gilding for providing framing services at a
discounted rate.
Claymore Security for kindly providing their services, for three years
running, at no cost.
www.claymoresecurity.co.uk
Codorniu for kindly providing complimentary Anna de Codorníu
sparkling wine.
www.grupocodorniu.com
Gallery Support Group for hanging the artworks at the venue at a
discounted rate.
www.gallerysupportgroup.com
John Lewis & Peter Jones for promoting the auction in-store, online
and helping to bring art to the people by exhibiting some of the
collection in Peter Jones, Sloane Square and John Lewis, Oxford
Street.
www.johnlewis.com & www.peterjones.co.uk
Life Pure Water for kindly providing its bottled water free of charge.
For every litre you drink, Life promises to fund the delivery of at least
a litre of clean drinking water to a developing world community.
www.lifepurewater.com
Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, West Sussex for displaying the
artworks prior to the auction. De’Longhi is proud to be the Pallant
House Gallery headline sponsor for 2009.
www.pallant.org.uk.
DJ’s Morwenna & Matthew - The Princess and The Pauper who are
donating their services for free.
DJ Philippos who is offering his service at a discounted rate.
Pumphouse Productions for offering their production services at a
discounted rate.
www.pumphouse.co.uk
And finally, to all of the artists involved
for donating and, in some cases,
commissioning these wonderful works.
59
Committee
Deborah Allan
Melanie Morton
Jonathan Burton
Kate Mueli
Toby Clarke
Tom Parker-Bowles
Flora Fairbairn
Jackie Quilter
Mark Hix
Cristina Ruiz
Dylan Jones
Simon Rumley
Rebecca Macklin
Jennie See
Nick Martineau
Gavin Turk
Anne-Alexis Moody
Jonathan Zlotolow
60
Supporters
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Thank you
62
MACMILLAN DE’LONGHI ART AUCTION IN AID OF MACMILLAN CANCER SUPPORT
Macmillan Cancer Support improves the lives of people affected by
cancer. We provide practical, medical, emotional and financial support.
We are a force for change: listening to people affected by cancer and
working together for better cancer care.
One in three of us will get cancer. Two million of us are living with it.
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De’Longhi is a leader in style and design creating the world’s most
premium coffee machines.
As a brand dedicated to design and innovation we are delighted to be
again hosting the annual Macmillan De’Longhi Art Auction, an event
which raises awareness of the charity and supports the art community.
We hope you can join us in making the 2009 Macmillan De’Longhi Art
Auction as successful as the past two years.
w w w. d e l o n g h i . c o . u k
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Contact details: De’Longhi Press Office at Clarion Communications 020 7343 3130 / 020 7343 3133