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d-38123House OversightOther

Art exhibition at 2 Cornwall Terrace described as a showcase of a wealthy, nomadic trader‑collector

The passage is a promotional description of an art show with no concrete allegations, financial transaction details, or links to high‑level officials. It mentions no presidents, cabinet members, intel Venue is 2 Cornwall Terrace, a historic building near Regent’s Park, London. Exhibition features works by Picasso, Manet, Cézanne, Damien Hirst, Banksy, and others. Curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz an

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028285
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a promotional description of an art show with no concrete allegations, financial transaction details, or links to high‑level officials. It mentions no presidents, cabinet members, intel Venue is 2 Cornwall Terrace, a historic building near Regent’s Park, London. Exhibition features works by Picasso, Manet, Cézanne, Damien Hirst, Banksy, and others. Curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz an

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wealthcultureart-exhibitionlondoncurationhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
THE HOUSE OF THE NOBLEMAN CURATED BY WOLFE VON LENKIEWICZ & VICTORIA GOLEMBIOVSKAYA PRESS CLIPPING (INTERNET) The House of the Noble Man 15.10.2010 2 Cornwall Terrace, a magnificent 18th-century building off Regent’s Park and a stone’s throw from Frieze art fair, will be the venue for this spectacular exhibition featuring Old Masters and famous names from contemporary art, including Picasso, Manet, Cézanne, Damien Hirst, Banksy, Martin Kippenberger and Gerhard Richter. Work from the Saatchi Gallery’s ‘New Sensations 2010 ‘ including jotta artist Joshua Bilton also on show. The show imagines the house’s inhabitant as a hugely successful trader. Having used his mastery of technology and the possibilities of the information age to amass vast wealth, he aspires to find a shaping narrative for the etiolated form of his existence. Art is one of the avenues in his search. He may live in a nobleman’s house, but he’s no blue blood. A tax exile, nomadic by habit, our collector spends his days - and nights - bathed in the blue light of a computer screen, as he trades in dematerialized securities, or prices options based on weather conditions on the other side of the globe: drowned cities viewed remotely via CNN, or better, modelled via a computer simulation. The roles of the nobleman and artist found a convergence in the figure of Don Quixote, a fool who aspired to the chivalric codes he’d read about in antiquated texts. But this fantasy was a liberation; allowing him to contend with base matter, infusing it with near-infinite possibilities, just as the empirical certainties of the Renaissance would soon give way to the vertiginous perspectives of the new mathematics. The exhibition updates the Don Quixote model to cast the collector/artist/nobleman as a man without qualities, occupying the privileged space of the capitalist elite, looking down through a virtual window to plot the constantly-changing vectors of matter, bodies and events as they hurtle by on the other side of the glass. Curated by Victoria lonina-Golembiovskaya and Wolfe Von Lenkiewicz Friday 15th to Wednesday the 20th October, 11 am - 6 p.m, by appointment only 2 Cornwall Terrace, The Regent's Park, London NW1

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