Укр Eng

Press about us

18.10.2013

Frieze Scene: Damien Hirst, Billionaire Pinchuk, Saatchi

Ukrainian billionaire Victor Pinchuk launched his third $100,000 Future Generation Art Prize (for young talent) at the Serpentine Sackler Gallery, the new scene-shaper by Zaha Hadid.

Pinchuk’s guests included Marc Quinn and Damien Hirst.

When a guest noted 52-year-old Pinchuk’s relative youth (by billionaire standards), the Ukrainian shared a hug with Hirst and cried, “Young British artist -- young Ukrainian collector!”

Hirst, 48, in a suit jacket and jeans, recalled how, in his younger days, artists just wanted to be in five galleries.

“Now artists question everything, so they’re not just taking the gallery system as it exists,” he said. “They’re inventing their own futures.”

Also attending was Olafur Eliasson, the Danish-Icelandic artist whose artificial sun at Tate Modern was one of the most-loved lobby installations.

Eliasson said he’s working on “Little Sun” -- an environmental project that markets little solar-powered, sun-shaped lamps for 20 euros ($27) via www.littlesun.com and uses the cash to bring electricity to communities without it.

He handed over a unit powered by the sunlight in Berlin.

“It’s a small power plant that you can hold in your hand,” he explained. “It also gives you personal energy, meaning that it makes you stronger.”

 

Rubell’s Womb

Jennifer Rubell presented her new interactive work at the Frieze London fair this week.

It’s a large white reclining sculpture of her recently pregnant self with a belly-area cavity viewers can crawl into. During the preview, more than one grown man curled up inside.

After posing for photographers inside the womb, Rubell took time out to talk at the Stephen Friedman Gallery booth. She said her body was scanned when she was eight months pregnant, and the belly digitally carved out, “creating the void.”

Friedman announced he’d sold one of the sculptures (from an edition of three) for $200,000.

The night before collector Charles Saatchi sold artworks in a Christie’s sale, the auction house threw a huge party in a factory-sized former postal depot in London.

 

There to be inspected were Kader Attia’s “Ghost” (2007) -- 264 foil sculptures of Muslim women kneeling for prayer -- and Jake and Dinos Chapman’s “Tragic Anatomies” (1996), a forest of mutant, mating nudes.

Tracey Emin’s “To Meet My Past” bed looked so cozy, a guard had to stand by and stop any couples from lying down. It sold last night for 481,875 pounds ($778,854).

(Farah Nayeri writes for Muse, the arts & leisure section of Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are her own.)

Muse highlights include the New York and London weekend guides, Scott Reyburn on the art market, Lewis Lapham on history, Jeremy Gerard on U.S. theater and Amanda Gordon’s Scene Last Night.

To contact the writer on the story: Farah Nayeri in London at [email protected].

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Manuela Hoelterhoff at [email protected].
Source: Bloomberg.com
Author: Farah Nayeri
Share |

Back to the list

Video

RSS All video
23.02.2026

The 9th Ukrainian Lunch on the margins of the Munich Security Conference

26.01.2026

Ukrainian Breakfast in Davos 2026

10.11.2025

Борються за життя найменших пацієнтів! Науково-практична конференції в межах проєкту Колиски надії

29.09.2025 09:30:00

How to End the War?

Pages 1 2 3 4 5 ... of 5
 

News

RSS All news

Екосистема турботи про ментальне здоров’я: що обговорювали на конференції мережі ПОВЕРНЕННЯ?

14.05.2026

Проєкт ПОВЕРНЕННЯ, заснований Віктором та Оленою Пінчуками, провів II щорічну міжнародну науково-практичну конференцію «ПОВЕРНЕННЯ. Екосистема турботи про ментальне здоров’я», присвячену підтримці військових, ветеранів і членів їхніх родин.



In Vinnytsia, a mental health center of the nationwide network RETURNING (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ), founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk, has opened

13.05.2026

The Vinnytsia Mental Health Center of the nationwide RETURNING network (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ) will provide free professional psychological support to more than 4,000 military personnel, veterans, and their families every year. The project was founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk to support the mental health of Ukraine’s defenders, veterans, and their family members who have experienced the psychological consequences of the war caused by Russian aggression.



STILL JOY – FROM UKRAINE INTO THE WORLD @ BIENNALE ARTE 2026. A Collateral Event at the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. Presented by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre

08.05.2026

On 7 May 2026, the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre opened the project “Still Joy — From Ukraine Into the World” which is an official Collateral Event of the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. During the opening ceremony, speeches were delivered by Victor Pinchuk, businessman and philanthropist, founder of the PinchukArtCentre; Tetyana Berezhna, Deputy Prime Minister for Humanitarian Policy of Ukraine and Minister of Culture of Ukraine; the exhibition’s curators Björn Geldhof, Artistic Director of the PinchukArtCentre, and Oleksandra Pogrebnyak. Hlib Stryzhko, a veteran and marine who returned from Russian captivity, and Yuliia “Phobia” a senior sergeant in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, marine and combat medic, also addressed the audience. 

Pages 1 2 3 4 5 ... of 5
Created and supported by: «Art Depo» Creative Agency