Hong Kong:
Britain's White Cube gallery, known as an early champion
of provocative British artists Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin, launched its Hong
Kong branch today, becoming the latest Western gallery to open an Asian outpost
in pursuit of China's booming art market. White Cube was unveiling a
557-square-metre space in a new building in Hong Kong's central business
district. With the opening of its first branch outside Britain, White Cube
follows in the footsteps of other British as well as French and American
galleries that have set up shop in Hong Kong in recent years. As their home
markets plateau, they're pinning hopes for future growth on Asia, particularly
China, where a strong economy has been minting millionaires at a rapid clip.
Obviously there's a new generation of collector that is emerging in China, said
Graham Steele, White Cube's Asia director. But he added that Taiwan and South
Korea are also major markets for contemporary art, while Japan, India,
Indonesia and Australia have significant pockets of collectors. China was the
world's biggest fine art market in 2011 for the second year in a row,
accounting for 41.4 per cent of global sales of paintings, sculptures,
installations, photography and drawings worth USD 4.8 billion, according to
market information provider Artprice. On a day-by-day basis, there's more
Chinese collectors coming to London, coming to Miami and Switzerland coming to
the international art fairs -- in groups, individually, with artists, with
other collectors, with curators, said Steele. There's an amazing level of
interest. The arrival of White Cube in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous region of
China, underlines the sophistication and increasing influence of the region's
art collectors. Founded in 1993, White Cube has had a long association with
Hirst and Emin, the most prominent of a group known as the Young British
Artists that emerged in the 1990s. Hirst, one of the world's wealthiest
artists, is notorious for installations that feature sharks and other dead
animals suspended in formaldehyde and human skulls encrusted in diamonds. One
of Emin's most famous works is a recreation of her disheveled bed complete with
soiled clothing and empty vodka bottles.
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