Become a Member
Life

Please choose me, Mr Saatchi

Being selected for the annual Bloomberg New Contemporaries exhibition can be the first step on the road to fame and fortune.

November 26, 2009 11:10
Rinat Kotler at this year’s exhibition.

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

4 min read

One day earlier this month Charles Saatchi and Anita Zabludowicz found themselves together in a room in East London, searching for the new Damien Hirst. The two hugely influential art collectors were attending the opening day of Bloomberg New Contemporaries, an annual exhibition which, for the past 60 years, has been showcasing the kind of young talent that goes on to make it big in the art world.

The show is open to final-year undergraduates and current postgraduates at UK art colleges, with more than 1,000 students submitting work each year in the hope of making the final selection. The judges, this year, are a group of respected international artists; Ellen Gallagher, Wolfgang Tillmans, Saskia Olde Wolbers and John Stezaker.

The show has proved instrumental in the careers of young Jewish artists with one former participant, sculptor Daniel Silver, going on to exhibit all over the world. This year, two Jewish artists, both Israeli, feature among the 47 finalists; one a young film-maker, the other a meticulous draughtsman.

Amir Chasson studied design in Tel Aviv before coming to Goldsmiths College to pursue a masters in Fine Art. His work Pisspants is a large-scale drawing depicting a man falling backwards, away from the viewer, his face obscured but his soaked groin and jeans are thrust into the audience’s face. Chasson says he is “trying to understand what brings a person to this situation — when they loose control of their bodily functions”.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.