John
Kasmin, the dealer who gave David Hockney his first break 50 years ago, has
curated a show with Sotheby’s that aims to capture the spirit of a decade whose
stars won immediate and widespread success — like that later enjoyed by Damien
Hirst and other young artists championed by the likes of Charles Saatchi.
Important
post-war names such as Richard Smith, Bernard Cohen and Jeremy Moon are
included in the show alongside acknowledged stars such as Hockney, Bridget
Riley and Sir Anthony Caro.
But
according to Mr Kasmin, and post-war experts at the auction house, a lack of
private and corporate patronage of contemporary art at the time meant that
comparatively few British artists went on to achieve the acclaim of their
European or American counterparts such as Willem de Kooning or Barnett Newman.
Many resorted to teaching to the detriment of their careers.
Mr
Kasmin, now 78, was at the heart of a new gallery scene in the Sixties with
Robert Fraser — the dealer famously busted for drugs with Mick Jagger — and the
short-lived Indica gallery where John Lennon met Yoko Ono.
He said:
“There was an enthusiasm. You’d have shows in galleries that weren’t just
visited by a few old ladies up from the country. You suddenly had crowds.
“British
fashion, British music, there was suddenly a moment, just like now, all over
again, when London is suddenly the most exciting country in the world.”
The
exhibition, The New Situation — Art In London In The Sixties, includes some
works for sale and some on loan. It runs at Sotheby’s in New Bond Street from
Sep 4-11, www.sothebys.com
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