THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) scene. art design culture ideas http://www.alyngriffiths.com/scene/2010/10/the-house-of-the-noble-man/ The House of the Noble Man October 18th, 2010 This presentation of works by some of the world’s best known artists was intended more as a showcase for the incredible property in which it took place than for the art itself. The eight residences in this newly redeveloped Regency terrace happen to be on the market at the moment and, with the Frieze Art Fair taking place a stone’s throw away in Regent’s Park, this was a perfect opportunity to entice wealthy collectors to view a potential home or pied-a-terre. The House of the Noble Man is supposed to evoke the home of a fictitious 21st century merchant — a digital tycoon, trader and investor who collects art as a way of lending materiality to his otherwise transient and ethereal existence. =F ohh =— ————o ii — : 1 —_ | =! H > ae. ad = ) =| ’ j f mmm A ee a Only the best will do in this sort of setting and curators Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya managed to procure an astonishing selection of pieces including paintings, sculpture and installation works by Yves Klein, Alexander Calder, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin and Banksy. Contemporary design furniture from Carpenters Workshop Gallery helped to remind the visitor that you were ina home rather than a gallery. Also included in the presentation were the works of the four finalists from Channel 4 and the Saatchi Gallery’s New Sensations 2010, a prize for artists graduating from UK art courses. It would be impossible not to be impressed by the ambition and quality of this presentation and it certainly provided a refreshingly serene and luxurious experience in comparison to the mélée down the road at Frieze. However, there was something uncomfortable about viewing all of this wonderful art in what was, in essence, the worl