Archive for the ‘Motherlode’ Category

Damien Hirst’s diamond skull

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

hirstskull_front.jpg hirstskull_side.jpg

This has me intrigued, is this art, or simply great marketing? I think it’s more marketing than art. It’s a nice piece, skulls are just fascinating, and so are diamonds, they evoke a lot of feeling in most folks. That’s it’s allure, but is it worth a $100 million? Does this make Damien, for a single piece, the highest paid living artist of all time so far. I guess so. Maybe that’s an art in and of itself, it’s more marketing isn’t it.

$20 million to create, sell it for a $100 million, $80 million profit! He’s good.

Then there’s the question of the diamonds, eight and a half thousand of them. Ethically sourced! How the hell does one ethically source 8,500 diamonds! For some reason I don’t buy that.

It’s going to be intriguing to see if he can sell it for that price.

Here are some links to articles with more information on the skull:

Hirst’s diamond creation is art’s costliest work ever: The Guardian

Damien Hirst Says $100 Million Diamond Skull Is `Almost’ Sold: Bloomberg

Damien Hirst diamond encrusted skull: Art News Blog

George Michael eyes Hirst skull; for $50 million; that’s low!: ITV News

Posted in Art, Motherlode | 1 Comment »

The Sopranos and Design Lessons

Monday, June 11th, 2007

This is a great article by Michael Bierut over at Design Observer:
Everything I Know About Design I Learned from The Sopranos.

Great analogy of the intersection between popular culture and design.

The Sopranos

Posted in Design, Motherlode | No Comments »

Post-War Art Records Broken

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Francis Bacon's portrait Study from Innocent XFrancis Bacon starts the break, his Portrait Study from Innocent X, shown at left, fetched $52.6m (£26.5m) at Sotheby’s in New York – almost double the previous high for a Bacon work.

The version I prefer is the Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X (1953).

Study after Velázquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X (1953) (Des Moines)

Click the thumbnail above to view a larger version. He did quite a few as I recall. Compare the two, you tell me.

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MarkRothko1.jpgThen a Mark Rothko beats the record again in the same night and grabs it for a price of $72.8m (£36.7m) for his 1950 work White Center (Yellow, Pink and Lavender on Rose).

I really can’t fathom why, Bacon in my mind is so far superior an artist. Perhaps because it was sold by philanthropist David Rockefeller, who bought it for less than $10,000 on the advice of Dorothy Miller, the first chief curator at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, in 1960, and kept it in his office since.

The Bacon also surfaced after 30yrs in a private collection, perhaps a reason the valuation was so high for a Bacon.

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JACKSON POLLOCK: The most expensive painting ever sold on record is a 1948 work by Jackson Pollock when it changed hands for about $140m (£73m) in a private sale.

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Posted in Art, Motherlode | No Comments »

The Art of War

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

The Art of War

“Convoy of British merchant ships” by Blake, Post-1941.

There’s a great exhibition of war images over at the National Archives of the UK,
(why does it feel odd to type ‘the UK’, can one still call it that!)
The Art of War.

Via Drawn

Posted in Art, Illustration, Motherlode | No Comments »

The Web Design Survey, 2007

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

i_took_the_2007_web_design_survey

I took the survey, the results ought to be interesting.

If you do this you might wish to give it a shot.

Posted in Motherlode, Web Design | No Comments »

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