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Daily News


08 Sep 2008



Post-War and Contemporary Editions Auctions at Christie's
EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT


85 Old Brompton Road, London SW7 3LD
United Kingdom

11 September 2008

Many artists continue to be drawn to printmaking because of its aesthetic potential and the variety and beauty of the surfaces it can produce.

Starting in 1963 with Andy Warhol’s ‘Kennedy’, from ‘Flash’ illustrated left – a series in which Warhol drew from media sources to document the events leading up to the assassination of JFK, the sale ends, via minimalism, conceptualism and Young British Art, with Banksy’s Di-faced Notes. The defaced bank notes where the Queen has been replaced with the face of another fated celebrity, ‘the people’s princess’. Where Warhol mirrors popular culture, Banksy critiques it, using print to disseminate his anti-establishment argument.

“Prints reflect our contemporary society in a unique way. The print embodies the aspirations of our culture, accessibility, inclusively, duplication, the free market and fashion. In the last fifty years printmaking has moved from the fringes of art production, to become a standard part of most artistic careers. Not only do the best artists of our time make prints, some of the best artworks of our time are prints.” Murray Macaulay, Specialist and Head of Prints, South Kensington.

One of the sale highlights is Barely Legal, 2006 by Banksy (estimate: £30,000-50,000). This rare signed edition was published in conjunction with Banksy's first large scale show in America, which was billed as a 'vandalised warehouse extravaganza'. The accompanying set of prints include some of the artist's most iconic images including 'Sale Ends Today', 'Auction', 'Shopping Trolleys', 'Grandmas', 'Applause' and Destroy Capitalism'. This particular set is extremely rare, one of only six sets signed by the artist. It is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by the Studio Director of Modern Multiples Fine Art Editions, Richard Duardo, and the publisher, Steve Lazarides.

A particularly unusual lot in the sale is Cultural Ties, which was a global project and the brain child of London art dealer Kapil Jariwala. The brief was for 77 artists from around the world to design neck tie mock-ups which were translated into textile format by Como, Italy's Ratti silk factory. The lot includes 78 of these ties, designed by various contemporary artists including Peter Blake, Louise Bourgeois, Jeff Koons, Jake Chapman, Dinos Chapman, Richard Long, and others. A limited edition of 300 of each tie was produced for sale for the benefit of UNICEF.


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