| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010-10-01 | N/A | Sotheby's sales from Jerry Hall's collection. | London | View |
This document is a press clipping from The Independent, dated October 8, 2010, discussing the upcoming Frieze Art Fair and the associated week of art auctions and events in London. It highlights key auctions at Christie's, Sotheby's, and Phillips de Pury, as well as a special exhibition titled "The House of the Noble Man" curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya.
This document is a press clipping from Paul Fraser Collectibles regarding an art exhibition titled "The House of the Nobleman," curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. The event, held at 2 Cornwall Terrace in Regent's Park, London, featured high-value works by Picasso, Warhol, and Hirst, with Picasso pieces valued at over £6 million. The document bears a House Oversight Committee stamp, indicating it is part of an investigation file.
This document is a press clipping from ARTINFO UK dated October 11, 2010, providing a guide to art events during Frieze Week in London. It details various exhibitions at galleries and museums, including the Tate Modern and Thomas Dane Gallery. Notably, it highlights an exhibition titled 'The House of the Noble Man' curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya, located at Boswell House, 2 Cornwall Terrace, Regent's Park—a property historically linked to Epstein's network.
This document is an Artnet press clipping titled 'London Dispatch' dated approximately October 22, 2010, reviewing the 8th Frieze Art Fair and associated events. It details high-value art sales including a $5.6 million Damien Hirst piece, mentions high-profile attendees like Steve Cohen and Charles Saatchi, and discusses exhibitions at BlainSouthern and 'The House of the Noble Man.' It also mentions a rumor about Bill Clinton purchasing a property at Cornwall Terrace.
This document is a newspaper article from circa 2010 about an art exhibition called 'New Sensations at the House of the Nobleman' in London. The exhibition, organized by the Saatchi Gallery and Channel 4, features work by 20 promising graduate artists alongside masterpieces by artists like Picasso and Warhol. The document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein, despite the user's prompt; its inclusion in an Epstein-related collection may be incidental, suggested by the 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028324' footer.
This newspaper article from The Times on October 29, 2010, discusses the emerging trend of using high-end art to market luxury real estate, focusing on an exhibition in a Cornwall Terrace mansion in London during the Frieze art fair. The document is tangentially related to the Epstein case through the mention of art dealer Jay Jopling, a known friend of Ghislaine Maxwell, and artists like Damien Hirst and Andy Warhol, whose work was reportedly collected by Jeffrey Epstein. The article itself does not mention Epstein or his illicit activities but was likely collected by investigators to map social and professional networks.
This document is a 2010 article from 'The Glass Magazine' providing a guide to the Frieze art fair in London. It details major art auctions at Christie's and Sotheby's and highlights fringe exhibitions, including 'The House of the Noble Man' co-curated by Victoria Golembiovskaya. The document's footer, 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028316', suggests it was collected as evidence for a U.S. House of Representatives Oversight Committee investigation, making it relevant to the Epstein case due to Golembiovskaya's reported connections to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is an online press clipping from October 18, 2010, reviewing an art exhibition called 'The House of the Nobleman,' curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. The exhibition displayed works by prominent artists like Andy Warhol and Damien Hirst within a luxury residential property for sale near Regent's Park, blending art with real estate. The author critiques this commercial approach, questioning whether art should be used primarily as a sales tool for property.
This document is a press clipping from ArtBistro dated October 15, 2010, detailing an art exhibition in London called 'The House of the Noble Man.' The show, curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya, featured approximately £20m worth of art for sale, including major works by Picasso and Cézanne. The exhibition was held at 2 Cornwall Terrace, a property co-developed and sponsored by the Russian real estate company Mirax, headed by Sergei Polonsky.
This document is a press clipping from the Olyvia Fine Art website, dated around September-October 2010. It announces an art exhibition called 'THE HOUSE OF A NOBLEMAN', curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya, which took place from October 15-20, 2010, and featured works by Andy Warhol. The document's footer, 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028312', suggests it was collected as evidence for a government investigation.
This document is a press clipping of an October 12, 2010 article from The Huffington Post, providing a guide to Frieze Week in London. The article highlights several art exhibitions, including a Gauguin show at the Tate Modern and an exhibition titled "The House of the Noble Man" at Boswell House, which was curated by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz and Victoria Golembiovskaya. This particular exhibition, available by appointment, featured works by prominent artists like Picasso, Damien Hirst, and Andy Warhol.
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