Saturday, January 10, 2009

THE REVOLUTION CONTINUES AT SAATCHI GALLERY IN LONDON


Untitled 2005 by Yue Minjun, at The Revolution Continues: New Art From China exhibition at the new Saatchi gallery. Photograph: David Levene

The record for the number of visitors to a contemporary art exhibition, set in 1997 by the groundbreaking Sensation BritArt show at the Royal Academy, has been broken by the inaugural show at Charles Saatchi's new London gallery in Chelsea. The Revolution Continues, which showcased new art from China, was visited by an average of 5,200 people a day and, it has been announced this weekend, will now be followed by Unveiled, another free show, this time featuring new work from the Middle East. By the time the exhibition of Chinese work closes, it will have attracted around 525,000 people, soundly beating Sensation which was seen by 300,000 and duly anointed the most popular contemporary art show in the world at the time. Curiosity about Chinese contemporary work reached fever pitch this year. Many of the most financially successful artists in the world are working in or come from China, including Zhang Xiaogang, Yue Minjun and Zeng Fanzhi. Of the 20 top-selling 20 international artists, 11 are Chinese. Building on the impact of the Chinese show, Saatchi, who was born in Iraq, now hopes to surprise his audience with unexpected work from an artistic community that the British public rarely has the chance to see. The former advertising guru, who is now one of the world's richest art collectors, concedes that the unknown work of Middle Eastern artists may not compete as a popular attraction with pieces from the booming Chinese art scene, but he argues that it is an increasingly important region.
Saatchi initially set a target of attracting a million visitors a year, compared with the total of 600,000 who came during the three years that his gallery was in London's County Hall building, opposite the Houses of Parliament. Tate Modern, Saatchi's main rival in scale and content, attracts around four million a year.