Nomis21
New Member
🗨️ 61
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September 2016
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FREUD PR Art filled office with BANKSY originals plus more, by Nomis21 on Jul 15, 2020 12:30:59 GMT 1, They must have used this office when filming "Greed"
Looks like an AP GWB also!!!
They must have used this office when filming "Greed" Looks like an AP GWB also!!!
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Winter
Junior Member
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March 2007
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FREUD PR Art filled office with BANKSY originals plus more, by Winter on Jul 15, 2020 13:08:12 GMT 1, Was impressed until I saw the Lenin on rollerskates
Was impressed until I saw the Lenin on rollerskates
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met
Junior Member
🗨️ 2,797
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June 2009
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FREUD PR Art filled office with BANKSY originals plus more, by met on Jul 16, 2020 17:19:35 GMT 1,
Thank you for posting this Business Insider article from 2017. I would not otherwise have known about it.
To his credit, the author made a good effort identifying pieces on the wall display:
1. "Progress," by Shepard Fairey, 2008. 2. An Andy Warhol piece - "Sigmund Freud (Ten Portraits of Jews of 20th Century)," 1980. 3. "Beautiful Asthma, Abestosis the Light at the End of the Tunnel No Use Crying Over Spilt Milk," by Damien Hirst, 2005. 4. A three-rotor Enigma cipher machine used by British WWII codebreakers. 5. A piece of Concorde. As in, the plane. 6. A dinosaur foot from Moa, New Zealand. And it's not even the most impressive dinosaur fossil in Freuds' office. 7. "Portrait of Lord Philip Gould," by Adrian Steirn. 8. "Street Kid, Favela Morro da Providencia, Rio de Janiero, Brasil," by JR, 2008. 9. An 18th century human skull, kept in a Victorian glass dome. 10. "Happy Head," by Damien Hirst, 2007. 11. "What?" by graffiti artist Banksy, 2007. [Note: Presumably unauthenticated.] 12. An heirloom grandfather clock. 13. A copy of Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies, published in 1623.
Slightly puzzling, however, is that the Yves Klein works weren't mentioned.
Not so much a fan of what appears to be one version of The Wave (between numbers 3 and 7). But Blue Venus (The Venus of Alexandria) (S 41) (between numbers 2 and 4) is an editioned sculpture I would truly love to own.
For an idea of scale of this huge wall display, Blue Venus measures about 69 cm in height, without the pedestal.
Thank you for posting this Business Insider article from 2017. I would not otherwise have known about it. To his credit, the author made a good effort identifying pieces on the wall display: 1. "Progress," by Shepard Fairey, 2008. 2. An Andy Warhol piece - "Sigmund Freud (Ten Portraits of Jews of 20th Century)," 1980. 3. "Beautiful Asthma, Abestosis the Light at the End of the Tunnel No Use Crying Over Spilt Milk," by Damien Hirst, 2005. 4. A three-rotor Enigma cipher machine used by British WWII codebreakers. 5. A piece of Concorde. As in, the plane. 6. A dinosaur foot from Moa, New Zealand. And it's not even the most impressive dinosaur fossil in Freuds' office. 7. "Portrait of Lord Philip Gould," by Adrian Steirn. 8. "Street Kid, Favela Morro da Providencia, Rio de Janiero, Brasil," by JR, 2008. 9. An 18th century human skull, kept in a Victorian glass dome. 10. "Happy Head," by Damien Hirst, 2007. 11. "What?" by graffiti artist Banksy, 2007. [Note: Presumably unauthenticated.]12. An heirloom grandfather clock.13. A copy of Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies, published in 1623.Slightly puzzling, however, is that the Yves Klein works weren't mentioned. Not so much a fan of what appears to be one version of The Wave (between numbers 3 and 7). But Blue Venus (The Venus of Alexandria) (S 41) (between numbers 2 and 4) is an editioned sculpture I would truly love to own. For an idea of scale of this huge wall display, Blue Venus measures about 69 cm in height, without the pedestal.
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