MY ART WORK IS FEATURED IN THE POSTCARD KILLINGS MOVIE FOR 1.3 SECONDS !!!
SOLO SHOW @ TURF PROJECTS, CROYDON, LONDON
THE TRONIE’S OF CROYDON-OH
TURF PROJECTS
6TH-9TH OF JULY 2022
PV AND ARTIST TALK 1PM -5PM SATURDAY 9TH
THE WHITGIFT CENTRE, 46-47, TRINITY COURT, CR0 1UQ, CROYDON, LONDON.
A NEW BODY OF WORK BY THE ARTIST MR PAUL DAVID CHISHOLM
A series of new paintings and sculptures by the Artist Paul Chisholm celebrating or commiserating a supposed post Covid and Brexit Britain. Created during lockdown in the past two years.
When someone asks you where are you from? And you say Croydon they respond with “oh”. The paintings are a continuation of the artists series “ The Lost Children of paradise” Taking the concept of the circus onto or into the streets and our houses where we were confined to during the pandemic.
Mainly inspired by the new insights of peoples homes and their heads whilst live streaming from the confines of their homes. This pandemic gave us a new zeitgeist in terms of the way we hear, see and interact with each other especially via the news, peoples book shelves, the mess and the interiors of their homes are broadcast live on TV, as well as social groups and special interest groups via zoom or skype. Suddenly our heads have become public figures and the ways in which we portray ourselves and our ideas are subject to our background image choices when using a video camera and our headshots. i.e a Tronie. A Dutch term for a face portrait. Funnily enough the artists boyfriend is Dutch and they spend half the year in Amsterdam.
“ A tronie is a type of work common in Dutch Golden Age painting and Flemish Baroque painting that depicts an exaggerated or characteristic facial expression. These works were not intended as portraits but as studies of expression, type, physiognomy or an interesting character such as an old man or woman, a young woman, the soldier, the shepherdess, the Oriental, or a person of a particular race, etc.[1][2]
The main goal of the artists who created Tronie’s was to achieve a lifelike representation of the figures and to show off their illusionistic abilities through the free use of colour, strong light contrasts, or a peculiar colour scheme. Tronie’s conveyed different meanings and values to their viewers. Tronie’s embodied abstract notions such as transience, youth, and old age, but could also function as positive or negative examples of human qualities, such as wisdom, strength, piety, folly, or impulsiveness.[2] These works were very popular in Holland and Flanders and were produced as independent works for the free market.”
The artist would like to thank Sane in London and Visual Aids in New York for their kind generosity in supporting the production of this work alongside Turf Projects, Croydon for their commitment in showing the new body of work.
Paul Chisholm (1983) born in Canterbury, England and brought up in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. He studied at Nottingham Trent University (2004) before doing his MA in Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art in London (2018/2019). Chisholm’s practice has been featured on The BBC, The Daily Star, Metro Newspaper, Attitude magazine and more. He came to notoriety in 2017 when he sold “ The Worlds most painful dildo” as dubbed by the press at Christies, London in Aid of the Terrence Higgins Trust. Recent exhibitions include Too much World at the Cookhouse Gallery, Chelsea London curated by Anni Lii from the Sotheby’s Institute , Cookies & Coke at The Old Biscuit factory, Bermondsey London ( Batch Artists) , Paint, White Conduit Projects, London & The Everyday exhibition, Curated by Visual Aids, La mama Galleria, New York.
QUOTE “ WIKIPEDIA”
FOR MORE INFO: WWW.MRPAULDAVIDCHISHOLM.COM & FOR PRESS & SALES INQUIRES: MRPAULDAVIDCHISHOLM@GMAIL OR INFO@TURFPROJECTS
TEL: 01883740435 FOR THE ARTIST OR THE GALLERY @ 02032510108
Terrence Higgins Trust Auction @ Christies, London, March 07, 2022
Im pleased to announce my work “ Jack&Jill” Will be up for auction at the annual Terrence Higins Trust auction at Christies and with the Auction Collective. Please bid generously and see link below for tickets. Terrence Higgins Trust: The Auction 2022 Tickets Tickets, Mon 7 Mar 2022 at 19:00 | Eventbrite
Sane Artist Creative award
Im pleased to say i have been awarded a sane creative award for new art materials. Thank you SANE for you support and belief in my practice. SANE is a mental health charity based in London, U.K
Postcards from the edge - Visual Aids New York
This years benifit for Visual Aids Postcards from the edge. Im pleased my work Dont fear a/the Virus will help Visual Aids carry on thier vital work.
New Studio & winner of the golden ticket
Im pleased to say the opening yesterday at Bletchingley Castle went super well. The winner of the golden ticket was Tony Elias a member of the board of trustees at Bletchingley Parish Council. The exhibition is on view until the 3rd of October by appointment only please telephone 01883740435. Bletchingley is close to redhill station which is twenty minutes by train from either London Bridge or Victoria stations and ten minutes by car from Gatwick airport.
Iwould qlso lie to ublicly thank the Parish council for unanamously voting for my new studio which is at 78a High street, Bletchingley.Surrey.
The Lost Children of Paradise @ HOXTON253 2021 cancelled
Press Release
Mr Paul David Chisholm &
Hoxton 253 Gallery, London are pleased to present
The Lost Children of Paradise
DTBC 2021
For more information and Press Inquiries please contact info@hoxton253gallery.com
Reflections on the Many Faces of Public and Private Selves Through Paul Chisholm’s The Lost Children of Paradise
Text by Wil Ceniceros
Although much of Chisholm’s artwork can be seen as recognizing the progress made in HIV research and treatment, his artwork serves to reminds viewers of the persistent stigma associated with the disease and reveals the need to continue raising awareness on the subject matter. Anchoring Paul Chisholm’s recent body of artworks is a series of clown paintings, which transport us into a journey that includes a dark and invisible, yet omnipresent reality Chisholm has been experiencing. In the clown paintings, we see Chisholm extending his exploration of the themes of ‘public and private selves’ previously seen in Lost Boys (2017) and he creates a new visual language through the figuration of portrait-like clown faces. It is these themes of ‘public and private selves’ that are relevant to all human beings regardless of age, gender or background and which make Paul Chisholm stand out as a noteworthy contemporary artist.
How can an artist represent the dark and invisible world of individuals living with HIV, trauma and mental illness? In 1949 Theodor Adorno pronounced that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric,” a hyperbolic rejection to the aestheticization of all forms of post-traumatic expression. Instead, Adorno suggests that art ought to be transformed “from the harmonic and knowable to the jarring and irresolvable”1 and argues that “mimesis in its physiological, somatic dimension is Angleichung, a becoming, or making similar, a movement toward, never reaching a goal. It is not identity, nor can it be reduced to nonidentity together as nonidentical similitude and in unresolvable tension with each other.
CONTEMPORARY ARTIST Paul David Chisholm (b. 1983, Canterbury, UK) started his art education in Nottingham Trent University (Class of 2004) before completing a Master’s in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts (Class of 2019). His artistic practice includes painting, sculpture and performance art, and it is through these various mediums and their subject matter that he creates a visual language exploring themes regarding his homosexuality, sexual abuse trauma, mental illness and politics. Among the artworks Paul Chisholm became widely known for is his sculpture Viral Load 2010, a black dildo covered with glass-headed pins which he created as a response to his HIV diagnosis and referred to by the media as ‘the world’s most painful sex toy’. Chisholm has donated artworks to charity organizations such as the Terrence Higgins Trust who have auctioned the pieces at Christie’s auction house in London to help support people living with HIV across the UK. In 2011, Chisholm’s artworks Fuck Me I Have Love & H*I*V was exhibited alongside Felix Gonzalez Torres, General Idea in the New York exhibition ‘Mixed Messages,’ a benefit for the US-based non-profit organization Visual AIDS, which raises awareness and dialogue around HIV/AIDS. The most recent 2019 Terrence Higgins Trust auction at Christie’s featured Chisholm’s oil on canvas painting, Lost Boys (2017), which alludes to the boys lost to HIV, AIDS and related suicide deaths while exploring the “juxtaposition between public and private selves and the battle to survive.”
HOXTON 253 is a London based non-profit artist run gallery and project space, providing an experimental platform to emerging and mid-career artists.
Our aim is to nurture creative talents and to build a community of artists and local residents with the objective to provoke critical dialogue within contemporary culture and society.
As a green and sustainability-conscious initiative, our passion lies in creating environments that takes a stance on our communal and individual responsibilities in regards of our societal and political position in the world, while also dedicating particular attention to highlighting artistic voices that challenge the current untenable system and promote a healthier and sustainable future.
HOMOPROMO & IAMNOTANABOMINATION in Unicorn Magazine
https://unicornzine.com/issue-004/making-art-protesting-powerfully-and-changing-the-world/
Sothebys essay on the lost children of Paradise
Reflections on the Many Faces of Public and Private Selves Through Paul Chisholm’s The Lost Children of Paradise (2018).
Text by Wil Ceniceros
Contemporary artist Paul David Chisholm (b. 1983, Canterbury, UK) started his art education in Nottingham Trent University (Class of 2004) before completing a Master’s in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts (Class of 2019). His artistic practice includes painting, sculpture and performance art, and it is through these various mediums and their subject matter that he creates a visual language exploring themes regarding his homosexuality, sexual abuse trauma, mental illness and politics. Among the artworks Paul Chisholm became widely known for is his sculpture Viral Load 2010, a black dildo covered with glass-headed pins which he created as a response to his HIV diagnosis and referred to by the media as ‘the world’s most painful sex toy’. Chisholm has donated artworks to charity organizations such as the Terrence Higgins Trust who have auctioned the pieces at Christie’s auction house in London to help support people living with HIV across the UK. In 2011, Chisholm’s artworks Fuck Me I Have Love & H*I*V was exhibited alongside Felix Gonzalez Torres, General Idea in the New York exhibition ‘Mixed Messages,’ a benefit for the US-based non-profit organization Visual AIDS, which raises awareness and dialogue around HIV/AIDS. The most recent 2019 Terrence Higgins Trust auction at Christie’s featured Chisholm’s oil on canvas painting, Lost Boys (2017), which alludes to the boys lost to HIV, AIDS and related suicide deaths while exploring the “juxtaposition between public and private selves and the battle to survive.”
Although much of Chisholm’s artwork can be seen as recognizing the progress made in HIV research and treatment, his artwork serves to reminds viewers of the persistent stigma associated with the disease and reveals the need to continue raising awareness on the subject matter. Anchoring Paul Chisholm’s recent body of artworks is a series of clown paintings, which transport us into a journey that includes a dark and invisible, yet omnipresent reality Chisholm has been experiencing. In the clown paintings, we see Chisholm extending his exploration of the themes of ‘public and private selves’ previously seen in Lost Boys (2017) and he creates a new visual language through the figuration of portrait-like clown faces. It is these themes of ‘public and private selves’ that are relevant to all human beings regardless of age, gender or background and which make Paul Chisholm stand out as a noteworthy contemporary artist.
How can an artist represent the dark and invisible world of individuals living with HIV, trauma and mental illness? In 1949 Theodor Adorno pronounced that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric,” a hyperbolic rejection to the aestheticization of all forms of post-traumatic expression. Instead, Adorno suggests that art ought to be transformed “from the harmonic and knowable to the jarring and irresolvable”1 and argues that “mimesis in its physiological, somatic dimension is Angleichung, a becoming, or making
1 Theodor W. Adorno, “Cultural Criticism and Society,” trans. Samuel Weber and Shierry Weber, Prisms (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1981), 39.
similar, a movement toward, never reaching a goal. It is not identity, nor can it be reduced to nonidentity together as nonidentical similitude and in unresolvable tension with each other.”2 Contemporary artists such as Cindy Sherman (b. 1954) and Susan Coe (b. 1954) have found mimesis useful to represent trauma “and the resulting frustration with memory that is neither transparent nor orderly.”3 Similarly, contemporary artist Paul Chisholm uses his artwork to elucidate and simultaneously dissolve the stigma and social marginalization felt by himself and others in similar situations. Through mimesis, or the uninterrupted interplay between past and present, Chisholm invites the viewer to understand that his paintings as representations pale in comparison to the individual and collective albatrosses around our necks that we carry every day.
Chisholm’s clown paintings consist of a series titled The Lost Children of Paradise (2018), in which the clown is used as a metaphor to make visible his exploration of identity, and the process of mythmaking. Inspired by the 1945 French epic drama Les Enfants du Paradis, this body of work was started in December 2018 while pursuing a MAFA degree at the Chelsea College of Arts in London. Through the highly stylized clown paintings, the artist explores connections beyond traditional associations of comic relief, and instead reminds the viewer of the individual and collective frailty and weakness in human beings. In his essay on The Lost Children of Paradise, Chisholm explores representing the need to mask sexual identity stating that “for a Queer Artist like myself we have always had to make magic happen. Life was never simple, we always had to be inventive [and] put on our mask and face bravely a heteronormative society.” The clowns are also a metaphorical representation of Chisholm’s identity as ‘the artist,’ exploring the role he takes on as an entertainer. He refers to the series as alluding to the clown images as fascinating “because of his ability to mask in make-up and flamboyance his true sadness, he performs and entertains very much like an artist does. A vagabond, an outsider and a fool dedicated to his Art.” In addition, he states that the portrait-like paintings represent the personifications of society riddled with the “veneer of instability, this gloss, this shine, this vision of ourselves and how we present our beings to the world which is so crushingly hopeless, we buy, we shop, we consume, like automated robots looking for the next kick.”
Central to understanding the clown series is Chisholm’s intellectual and aesthetic depth include understanding the process of layering which he uses to create a vocabulary to explore the hybridity between the subjects and the themes. Through the use of curved lines, dripping paint, and incomplete/broken lines, Chisholm illustrates a vocabulary that reveals the complexity of the subject (self, viewer, society) and the themes being explored (mental illness, trauma, HIV). In the subjects/clowns, Chisholm interweaves traditional references about clowns as jovial, amusing figures. Acting as a self-portrait for the artist, the clowns’ exaggerated smiles allude to the artist’s inner turmoil whilst
2 Andreas Huyssen, “Of Mice and Mimesis: Reading Spiegelman and Adorno,” in Visual Culture and the Holocaust, 32.3 Janet Marstine, “Challenging the Gendered Categories of Art and Art Therapy: The Paintings of Jane Orleman,” in Femenist Studies 28, no. 3 (fall 2002), 632.
dealing with depression and anxiety which he feels must be masked in order to be taken seriously in society and the artworld. His use of curved lines in the clown’s curly hair and his exaggerated smile help create a psychological sense of comfort and ease corresponding to the symbol of the clown as a harmless, approachable figure. Simultaneously, the verticality of the painting and the largesse of the figures suggests a sense of dominance and strength which confer onto the clown a double meaning that oscillates between having an air of comfort and menace. In A Portrait of the Artist as a Clown Upside Down, the upside-down clown takes the figure and myth of the artist/clown as a jovial, comical figure and subverts it. Further evidence of the layering includes by appropriation of Georg Baselitz’s upside-down painted subjects to allude to emotional distress. The artwork is exhibited resting on two side-by-side, identical backwards ticking clocks referencing “Untitled” (Perfect Lovers) (1991) by Félix González-Torres, which serve as abstracted substitutions for bodies while acting as a metaphor for love.
Additional layering can be seen in the foreground, where Chisholm appropriates artistic processes that have inspired him such as the dripping paint tracery. Here we see Chisholm paying homage to Peter Doig who painted a tracery of snow-covered branches in his landmark painting Architect’s Home in the Ravine (1991) which act as a veil to draw the viewer closer to the painting. In his clown paintings, the tracery of dripping paint takes on a more emotional connotation conveying a sense of melancholy. Upon closer inspection one notices Chisholm’s use of gestural brushstrokes which gives the viewer an insight into the artist’s exploration of representing his anxieties and frustrations. In keeping with the aforementioned allusions to myths and roles we take on, and alongside an environment filled with avarice, artifice and apathy, the foreground tracery also reads as a tool to depict the emotionally incarcerated and grotesque individuals we run the risk of becoming when we conform to social norms for acceptance. Implicit in the clown paintings is also an indication that escape from the strictures of society are unobtainable. The clowns’ asymmetrical and distorted facial features disorient the viewer further developing a language of despair, while through his use of drips in darker tones of red paint take on a morbid sense, akin to splatters of blood as if making the subject appear as a damaged individual.
Through the clown series, Chisholm masterfully chose the idea of portraiture to explore the challenging nature of surviving trauma and mental illness. Philosopher Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe argues that the self is “unrepresentable” and that (self) portraiture forces us to face the illusion that a portrait depicts the self as a unity, however it also fragments, dislocates and evokes terror.4 Through the broken lines scattered throughout the clown paintings, Chisholm expresses the illusory self as unity and depicts a sense of fracturing or disruption having taken place. Further, the clowns are painted alone, without friends or family members, speaking to the feeling of isolation often felt by individuals living with mental illness, trauma.
4 Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and François Martin, “Retrait” of the Artist, in Two Persons, trans. Mira Kamdar (Lyons, France: Editions MEM/Artifacts, 1985), 66, 69
Chisholm’s clown paintings can be further read as offering his clown portraits as testimonials of his past and present experiences. It is worth emphasizing that “a testimonial is more than a confession; while a confession merely declares, a testimonial questions. A testimonial demands that a survivor use the personal voice so that [he] cannot be discredited as passive victim. A testimonial is a position that directs attention from the survivor to the cultural norms that condone trauma.”5 The child-like style of painting and the use of highly made-up, masked clowns closely associated with entertainment, allow Chisholm to further blurs the boundaries between art and art as therapy. In this vein, Chisholm is able to access repressed memories of himself as an individual and as part of society, which require addressing, but also disrupts the voyeuristic pleasures of fetishization and objectification of an individual suffering in silence. In the process, he offers art as a form of de-pathologizing symptoms and behaviors and offers hope through the act of painting to reclaim a sense of control and self-determination in the present.
As an emerging artist, Paul Chisholm faces some of the same challenges as many of his peers in the pursuit of professional success. Among these challenges is questioning how an artist’s work engages in a discourse relevant to the here and now. Yet, despite the heavy context and overtly sexual/political nature, the clown work has been greatly successful with many collectors buying Chisholm’s new body of work. His multilayered clown paintings can be appreciated as Contemporary Art since they offer interpretations and explorations of that which is not seen yet is astonishingly real and relevant globally. Although Chisholm has foregrounded his clown series of artworks with his personal experiences, the paintings’ larger importance lies in enhancing our understanding of how art can represent visual dialogues between identity and self, past and present, personal and political.
5 Shoshana Felman, “Education and Crisis, or the Vicissitudes of Teaching,” in Testimony: Crises of Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis, and History, ed. Shoshana Felman and Dori Laub (New York: Routledge, 1992), 5.
LAUNCHING 1 ST JANUARY 2020
Three new catalogues of Chisholm’s work will be available to buy online on 1 st January 2020.
Studio works WTF 2018-2019 (CLICK TO ADD SUBTITLE) ZINE EDITION OF 100 £10.00 Each
The Lost Children of Paradise with Essay text by Will de Ceniceros from Sotheby’s Institute, London. £18.00
CHECK BACK HERE ON NEW YEARS DAY TO PURCHASE!
Empowerment Through Art with Essay text from Ana Bambic Kostov £18.00
NOS / OTROS Lecture openlab Mexico City
Im pleased to say Tonituah Lopez an Art Curator gave a talk on some my key works at Open Lab in Mexico City. He is the curator of the CHEMSEX Exhibition which was held there earlier in the year.
MC WHIMISCAL PRESS AND VIDEO @ HOXTON253 GALLERY
Artist Talk @ Tate Liverpool
I was delighted to take part Keith Haring conference Art & Activism at Tate Liverpool. Invited by Ted Kerr of the New school in New York as a part of ‘What you don’t know about AIDS could fill a museum’ published by ‘ONCURATING’
MC WHIMISICAL HOXTON253 PROJECT SPACE
PRESS RELEASE
MC DONALDS GOES CRAZY!
@HOXTON 253 PROJECT SPACE, HOXTON STREET, LONDON SUNDAY 24TH NOVEMBER 2019
12 -6PM
FOR PRESS INQUIRES: mrpauldavidchisholm@gmail.com OR info@hoxton253.com
For pre event video Links Please see: http://www.mrpauldavidchisholm.com/#/mc-whimsical/
“MC WHIMISICAL”
101 Automated machines, McDonalds burger bags, batteries, staples, 2011-present Contemporary British Artist Paul Chisholm hosts a one-day performance of “Mc Whimsical”
Comprising of 101 automated Mc Donalds Burger bags. The gallery becomes a circus for new ideas about how, what, when and where we consume. Mc Donalds is not singled out here however the company stands in place for the ohhh-most recognisable tour de force in global capitalisation in fact there is a term for this the Mc Economy coined by the economist magazine. The cost of a Big Mac showing each country's economic and consumerist power by the cost of a Big Mac!
The work goes deeper and asks us to question our relationship with food, agriculture, the environment, meat eating and the homogenisation of consumption and capitalist ideals.
Fast food, fast lives, fast living and the hunger of the World’s most poor people it’s only 99p that’sequivalent to the daily working wage of over 30% of the worlds working poor.
This isn’t just another piece of performance of Art but a spectacle of a 21st century Post- apocalyptic Landscape Painting.
The performance will be held from 12 am to 6pm on Sunday 24th November 2019 at Hoxton253 Gallery. Hoxton Street, Hackney, London, N1
FREE HAMBURGERS & ALL-DAY FIZZ INCLUDED!
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Paul Chisholm (1983) born in Canterbury, England and brought up in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. He studied at Nottingham Trent University (2004) before doing his MA in Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art in London (2018/2019). Chisholm’spractice has been featured on The BBC, The Daily Star, Metro Newspaper, Attitude magazine and more. He came to notoriety in2017 when he sold “The Worlds most painful dildo” as dubbed by the press at Christies, London in Aid of the Terrence HigginsTrust. Recent exhibitions include Too much World at the Cookhouse Gallery, Chelsea London curated by Anni Lii from theSotheby’s
Institute , Cookies & Coke at The Old Biscuit factory, Bermondsey London ( Batch Artists) , Paint, White Conduit Projects, London & The Everyday exhibition, Curated by Visual Aids, La mama Galleria, New York. He lives between Bletchingley in Surrey & Amsterdam, Holland.
ABOUT HOXTON 253 PROJECT SPACE
is an artist-run gallery and project space, providing an experimental platform to emerging and mid-career artists.
We proudly run an artists for artists project space, where our aim is to nurture creative talents, provide accessible exhibition space to students, and build a community of artists with the objective to provoke critical dialogue within contemporary culture and society. Our diverse ongoing program of exhibitions, experimental projects, workshops, events and screenings are open to all art lovers, the local community, as well as patrons and collectors.
For info and more details about the gallery, please contact info@hoxton253.com
CHELSEA MA FINE ART SHOW
Too Much World @ the cookhouse gallery, Chelsea, London.
Too Much World (Anxiety in a Post Digital World) is an immersive and interactive installation about Anxiety. Join us on May 30 between 5-8pm when we transform one of the rooms at the Cookhouse Gallery into a bedroom for the duration of the show. Various video and sculptural works are staged within this environment, depicting experiences of anxiety from different angles and through different media. The room is also imbued with countless personal items contributed by the featuring artists who have had experiences with anxiety.
The title of the show is inspired by German artist/theorist, Hito Steyerl’s seminal writing, ‘Too Much World: Is the Internet Dead?’. The exhibition continues her exploration of the dark side of technology, portraying the overwhelming world we receive through different screens of technological devices.
Within Steyerl's framework, she lays emphasis on the notion that the world we live in is saturated with digital images that are constantly been edited and filtered via postproduction. Not only these images are overwhelming and anxiety inducing, but also they constantly migrate across screens and merge into our reality.They materialise as consumer goods that we own, altering physical places we occupy; they control who we are and what we want to be, and this does not even begin to scope what technology is capable of.
We have all seen too much world.
This exhibition is a collaboration between Chelsea College of Arts and Sotheby’s Institute of Art. Curated by Anni Li, participating artists include Emily Mulenga, Bo Fan, Paul Chisholm, Qiaoer Jin, Rita Castanheira and Thomas Walker depicting anxiety through their personal experiences through different media and angels.The exhibition aims to confront the beholder’s relationship to technology, and draw attention to its relation to anxiety.
Art in the Castle May 11th
Star-studded evening helps raise over £113,000
16 April 2019 News story
Graham Norton, Wayne Sleep, Lauren Lyle and others threw their support behind The Auction 2019.
The world of art, fashion, design and showbiz came together at the 23rd Terrence Higgins Trust Auction and helped raised £113,100 that will go to supporting people living with and affected by HIV across the UK.
Hosted by Christie’s Auction House in London, celebrities such as chat show host Graham Norton, This Morning’s resident doctor Ranj Singh, legendary dancer Wayne Sleep and Outlanderstar Lauren Lyle all threw their support behind the event.
Some of the biggest lots of the night included a Brexit-inspired sculpture by renowned artist Grayson Perry and a design by Turner Prize winner Antony Gormley.
Oil canvas painting, Lost Boys by Paul Chisholm, received lots of interest. The painting was inspired by the boys lost to the HIV epidemic throughout the decades and related suicide. It also points to stigma faced by those boys affected by HIV within modern day society.
During the bidding for this lot, the painting served as a reminder that while leaps and bounds have been made in HIV treatment, ending HIV stigma continues to be a major challenge.
Other big-selling items included a colourful and energetic piece by longstanding Terrence Higgins Trust supporter Andrew Salgado and a plus-one experience with James Corden to attend the premiere of Cats: the Movie later this year.
The Auction was opened by Ian Green, Chief Executive at Terrence Higgins Trust, who spoke about why these events and the generosity of supporters are so crucial in the UK’s HIV response.
'On World AIDS Day last year, we surpassed the 90:90:90 targets set by UNAIDS in the UK. With 92% of those living with HIV being diagnosed, 98% of those on HIV treatment and 97% of them having an undetectable viral load, which means they can’t pass it on. This would not have happened without your support.'
The online auction is open until Wednesday 24 April and features a range of exclusive lots and unique experiences.
One of the hot ticket items is a unique photograph taken by David Bailey CBE of Queen on the day of their iconic Live Aid performance. The picture is estimated to be worth £60,000.
A signed script and poster of the hit show Pose, which is set during the height of the epidemic in 1980s New York, has already seen several bids and looks set to raise hundreds of pounds for our work.
Cookies + Coke An Art Show
COOKIES + COKE
A CONTEMPORARY ART SHOW @ ART NUMBER 23 GALLERY, THE OLD BISCUIT FACTORY, BLOCK F, 100 CLEMENTS ROAD, BERMONDSEY, LONDON.
PRESENTED BY BATCH COLLECTIVE
PRIVATE VIEW OPENING 22ND MARCH 6-10PM
OPEN DAILY UNTIL 25TH MARCH 12-6PM OR PRIVATE VIEWING BY REQUEST.
FOR PRESS ENQUIRIES, PLEASE CONTACT: INFO@ARTBATCH.ORG
Shefali Asija, Lelia Byron, Paul Chisholm, Georg Dahled, MAtt Doughty, Marion Flanagan, Peter Ibberson, CEVIGA ( Kyungok Paik ) Andrea Rocha, Neil Shiereff, Anita Agarwal, (WILMA) Matt Weir and Will Coutts
Ten international artists work together to address problems of a post-Brexit world. Top on the agenda: How will the lonely, isolated British people get their stuff? Britain will stand alone, surviving on warm beer, cabbage and dry biscuits (like the good old days). What will they be willing to sacrifice for the sweet taste of foreign carbonated drinks?
Taking on the theme of CONSUMPTION, artists will explore what it means to mentally consume ideas, how humans consume the world, and the ethics of consumption. Come feed on artworks that will EAT, DRINK, BREATHE, USE, ABUSE, WATCH, INGEST, DEVOUR, and GOBBLE UP your attention.
Opening night on the 22nd will feature performances and live music.
25 March
Talks and performances by: Luz Hitters, Crystal Isabel Fischetti, Paul Chisholm
(Episolipsism) Cyrus Lamprecht and Rachel Wong, MAtt DOughty, Rita Castanheira,
(T&P Collective) Marina Silvello and Hannah Duckworth
Found at Last " In memoriam"
For Urgent Release
The Art work has been recovered and is now back in the safe space of the Artists’ studio…..