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Dirty Sexy Money - And That Was Just The Exhibition
Juno Moneta
28 June 2012
A lot of people – even supporters of market capitalism –
think the actual world of high finance is grubby although not many might reckon
it is also sexy. But a London art exhibition, “Dirty
Sexy Money”, certainly had material to set the pulse rate up a few notches. Your correspondent studied pictures of naked women, covered
in advertising designs and dollars, and jazzed up Marilyn Monroe portraits.
There was a nice rendition of cartoon action heroes. And we had skulls - lots
of skulls. If there is a message here, I suppose, it is an ironic dig at the
financial system, and perhaps also at America and materialism, but the
message isn’t raucous or politically strident at all. It is quietly naughty, in
fact. And it is hard not to spot the Andy Warhol influence at work here. The works are the creations of Ben Allen, an artist living
and working in Brighton on the UK’s
south coast. A relative whippersnapper at the age of 33, his work, according
to the publicity material I read, falls into the movement that is dubbed “Pop
Surrealism”, a form of “expressive art described as an underground visual art
movement.” Allen has managed to pick up a pretty hot list of clients: Sir Richard
Branson and Jade Jagger (daughter of Rolling Stones front-man Mick), among
others. And as Allen told me, he’s not precious about being commercially
successful and taking a businesslike approach to his work. His clients have
included big names such as Levi’s, Nokia and Virgin (the Branson connection
strikes again!). Several works had been sold last night. One item, “American
Girl – Empire Icon – was on sale for £13,000 and the most expensive piece I
saw. The event was held at Store Street Gallery, at 32 Store Street –
off Tottenham Court Road, and organised by Turner Barnes Gallery (based in Chelmsford, Essex). I did not see any investment bankers at the gallery last night. Given recent events about LIBOR manipulation, they probably had more pressing things on their minds.