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Topic: Charles Saatchi



  
 Charles Saatchi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saatchi's renown as a patron was at its peak in 1997 when part of his collection was shown at the Royal Academy as the exhibition 'Sensation', which travelled to Museums in Berlin and New York causing headlines and controversy and turning many young British artists into stars.
Saatchi was said to be devastated when, on 24 May 2004, a fire in a storage warehouse destroyed many art works, worth millions of pounds, from the Saatchi collection.
He is also famous for sponsoring the Young British Artists and establishing the Saatchi Gallery in 1985.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Saatchi   (335 words)

  
 Charles Saatchi
Charles Saatchi is facing criticism from his greatest creation, Damien Hirst, who after becoming rich from his patron has now decided that Saatchi 'only recognizes art with his wallet'.
Charles Saatchi and the exhibit I Am A Camera has been under attack by the British press this week after a police raid on the gallery with regard to some pictures of partly nude children.
The Saatchi Gallery was accused of displaying child porn in their exhibition I Am A Camera last week when the News of The World demanded the closure of the display at the north London gallery and condemed it as "a revolting exhibition of perversion under the guise of art."
http://www.mychelsea.net/chelsea/celebs-saatchi.htm   (789 words)

  
 Observer Saatchi's open house
Saatchi had an immediate sense that the home-made impact of the Goldsmith's group would be comparable to the effect of the Sex Pistols in music a decade earlier.
At the time when Saatchi had just opened his gallery, Hirst was embarking on his Goldsmith's degree and the GLC had just been abolished by the Prime Minister, Nigella was just across the river from Surrey Quays, insouciantly stepping through the battleground at Wapping, where she worked on the Sunday Times's literary pages.
Saatchi's late friend the great critic David Sylvester once told him how curators needed only one quality in organising their gallery: they needed to love the work they were displaying.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4631144-102280,00.html   (2774 words)

  
 Telegraph News
Charles Saatchi, the most influential collector of modern art in Britain, has denounced the Turner Prize as "pseudo-controversial rehashed claptrap".
Mr Saatchi's broadside, however, is likely to mark his final estrangement from the "establishment" of British modern art, led by Sir Nicholas Serota, the director of the Tate Gallery.
Mr Saatchi, 59, began collecting art in 1972: he funded his hobby with the personal fortune he made running Saatchi and Saatchi with his brother Maurice, now Lord Saatchi.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/11/24/nturn24.xml   (820 words)

  
 BBC NEWS In Depth Newsmakers Charles Saatchi: Artful adman
His acts of philanthropy, of bursaries at art schools and donations to the Arts Council, are well catalogued, but the artist Peter Blake says it must not be forgotten that he's a dealer as well as a collector.
It was a 1978 poster, "Labour Isn't Working", which made Saatchi and Saatchi a household name, even though it was a fake.
By this time, Charles Saatchi had already established himself as a major collector of modern art.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/uk/2000/newsmakers/2124645.stm   (848 words)

  
 Charles Saatchi the Stuckist
Charles Saatchi promoted ex Stuckist Stella Vine as his new art star in 2004; he visited the Stuckism International Gallery and read the Stuckist manifesto.
Charles Saatchi has reiterated ideas published four years earlier in the Stuckist Manifesto against white wall galleries and the necessity of art being in them to be valid.
Stuckism was founded by artists in 1999 to promote painting as superior to (Charles Saatchi's) conceptual art.
http://www.stuckism.com/Saatchi   (574 words)

  
 The Collector: Charles Saatchi
Saatchi lives in a townhouse in Chelsea with his second wife, Kay Hartenstein, who used to work at Waddington Galleries, and their 4-year-old daughter.
Charles Saatchi is the world's most influential — and most elusive — patron of art.
Saatchi, one might say, brings an adman's eye to the practice of connoisseurship; he favors art that makes an instant impact, art that surprises you and lodges in your brain, art with kicked-up visual appeal.
http://dh.ryoshuu.com/press/1999solomo.html   (3415 words)

  
 Saatchi Gallery
Charles Saatchi, British advertising guru turned art collector, has chosen London's County Hall on the southern bank of the Thames river as the site for a new gallery to house 2,500 pieces of his Contemporary art collection.
The new Saatchi Gallery is also a stone's throw away from the Tate Modern, the highly-acclaimed British gallery of Modern and Contemporary art.
Saatchi's stranglehold on Hirst and other young British artists has caused the Tate many problems leaving blank spaces in its collections.
http://www.bistart.com/BistArt0603/ENewsSaatchi.htm   (379 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Charles has also 'sponsored' young artists as in the case of Jenny Saville, who was able to create art for a year without financial worries impinging on her creativity through financial support from Saatchi.
Saatchi at that point established his reputation as a bold, risk-taking art collector.
Saatchi started out collecting comic books, records and jukeboxes until his wife, Doris bought him a minimalist work by Sol Le Witt and the art collection was born (source 17).
http://www.ciadvertising.org/studies/student/99_fall/theory/blakeman/saatchi/webpages/load6a.html   (500 words)

  
 Untitled Document
To illustrate the stark differences between the brothers, Charles never attended a board meeting in the 25 years of his tenure at Saatchi and Saatchi (source 1).
Charles Saatchi was the creative genius and Maurice was the financial wizard.
Charles was a mastermind at promoting his agency heavily in the early days.
http://www.ciadvertising.org/studies/student/99_fall/theory/blakeman/saatchi/webpages/load4.html   (554 words)

  
 Independent, The (London): 'Charles Saatchi buys artworks like Imelda Marcos bought shoes'
There are many Saatchi observers (sympathisers, artists and rivals), who believe that at some point in the near future, Charles will hand over a sizeable part of his collection to the new Tate Gallery of Modern Art at Bankside.
Since catching Saatchi's thousands with his pickled shark, Hirst has moved from a council flat in Deptford to a chic pad in Chelsea, where his greatest fan and patron lives.
In the hot-house world of modern art, Charles Saatchi is like a one-man Stock Exchange; no one dealing on his floor has much of a chance.
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19960217/ai_n14032486   (1376 words)

  
 Evening Standard (London): Is Charles in charge?
And this from Charles Saatchi, the man indelibly associated with art of a very different sort; sculptures made from cows, sharks, oil, dung and tampons executed by young British artists.
Saatchi, as his biographer Ivan Fallon tells it, arrived in art collecting as lazily as he 'drifted' into advertising in the Sixties.
Charles ran a show in 1981 called A New Spirit in Painting; he bought Kiefers, Warhols, Scullys, Polkes some of the greatest names in contemporary art.
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4153/is_20050204/ai_n9496897   (1443 words)

  
 Observer Tales of misery and imagination
Much was made of Saatchi's passion for contemporary art but there wasn't much analysis of the way he treats individual artists' works as commodities to be traded like pork belly futures - he is, after all, a wildly controversial figure with a stranglehold on modern art.
Saatchi may have learnt everything he knows about art from his ex-wife, Doris, but perhaps he still doesn't trust his own eye enough to stop shopping for the next big thing like a winning contestant in a Super Art-Market Sweep.
Of course it's the gangsta-rap loving Baghdad-born ad-guru-turned-art-patron, Charles Saatchi, the man who single-handedly created the phenomenon known as 'Brit Art'.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4691378-102280,00.html   (992 words)

  
 CONTROVERSY AND DEBATES
In 1999 M and C Saatchi, the second advertising agency he had set up with his younger brother Maurice, was attacked by the artist Gillian Wearing for copying her work in a BSkyB advert.
The Saatchi money was made in the heyday of their first advertising agency, Saatchi and Saatchi, the biggest in the world.
Charles began to collect juke boxes and cartoons and then, guided by his learned first wife, Doris Lockhardt, he started to collect modern art, focusing on American minimalists.
http://www.worldartcelebritiesjournal4.netfirms.com/controversy_and_debates.htm   (4690 words)

  
 Cronaca: Saatchi Collection turned down by Tate?
Charles Saatchi, Britain's foremost art collector, reveals today that he offered to give his entire £200 million art collection to the Tate Modern last year, but that his extraordinarily generous donation was rejected out of hand by the museum's director, Sir Nicholas Serota.
In an interview published in The Telegraph today, Mr Saatchi says that his gift, which would have transformed the Tate Modern into the world's leading museum of contemporary art, was turned down by Sir Nicholas last October, without consulting his trustees, on the grounds that the museum "already had commitments".
He initially told The Art Newspaper, in its issue to be published this week, that he believed the art collector had only offered to loan his 2,500 works - which include Tracy Emin's My Bed, Marcus Harvey's portrait of Myra Hindley and Damien Hirst's shark suspended in formaldehyde.
http://www.cronaca.com/archives/002986.html   (230 words)

  
 Galleon & Other Stories - The Saatchi Gallery
Advertising guru Charles Saatchi founded the Saatchi Gallery in 1985 “to familiarize the general public” with what was then-undiscovered, cutting-edge art of the time, and to showcase his personal collections.
Saatchi has been criticized for his overly enthusiastic collecting and the resultant superabundance of works collected together under one roof at one time.
And at least one news dispatch has hit the wire services, ironically noting a work of art in an art gallery in London has been discovered thrown away by maintenance staff, who had mistaken the art for rubbish.
http://www.culturevulture.net/ArtandArch2/Galleon.htm   (1060 words)

  
 artnet.com Magazine Reviews - London Calling
Saatchi contends that with the passage of time, such works have gone beyond shock and are now being rightfully appreciated by viewers.
Painted by a former nightclub stripper, the 35-year-old Stella Vine (her real name is Mellisa), the work sold to Saatchi for a mere £600 three weeks ago.
Over the last 11 months, the Saatchi Gallery has provided a forum for artists that make art that reflects the world we live in -- like it or not.
http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/laplaca/laplaca3-11-04.asp   (1387 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Arts features Is Charles Saatchi's grip on the art world loosening?
Charles had gone shopping and, elbows sharpened, was always at the head of the queue.
Saatchi and his wife, the cookery writer Nigella Lawson, live in Belgravia in west London, where every Saturday a popular farmers' market sets up on an island in Pimlico Road.
Photograph: PA There once was a time - and it wasn't so long ago - that Charles Saatchi used to spend his Saturday mornings trawling the edgier, grungier, not-yet-gentrified areas of far east London for up-and-coming, smart young art talent.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/features/story/0,11710,1580616,00.html   (1860 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Today's issues Charles Saatchi
The show attracted some high profile criticism when it exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art but Saatchi is confident enough to reprise his favourite artists with this year's Ant Noises.
He buys the entire studio contents of artists he likes and either exhibits them in his Saatchi gallery or donates them to less noted institutions in, for example, Swindon and Aberdeen.
And the lucky beneficaries are not the refuse dump and local garbologists but needy art galleries looking for a bit of Jordan Baseman or Richard Woods.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/netnotes/article/0,6729,365167,00.html   (249 words)

  
 artnet.com Magazine Features - London Calling
A man who compulsively buys art to show it off, Charles Saatchi has an obsessive nature that is both the source of his genius and his Achilles Heel.
Indisputably Britain's greatest living collector of the past two decades, Saatchi is equally thought of as "the most successful art dealer of our times," a man who, many claim, manipulates the art market to appease his sense of grandiosity and ensure his financial gain.
Saatchi's intention is for us to see the "remarkable paintings produced and overlooked in an age dominated by video, installation and photographic art."
http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/features/laplaca/laplaca2-9-05.asp   (1514 words)

  
 Damien Hirst's Hymn by Raichel Le Goff.
Purchased by Saatchi for a reported 1 million pounds, thanks to this controversy with the toy company it is now the world's most famous sculpture by a living artist and must have at least doubled if not trebled in value.
Further restrictions will be placed by Humbrol on the artist's reproduction of 'Hymn', Hirst's sculpture now owned by Charles Saatchi and currently on exhibit in the show 'Ant Noises' London.
Let patrons and artists strike deals as they wish, sceptics in fact have voiced doubts that Saatchi really parted with that much money for 'Hymn' and maintain it is just another ploy to inflate the value of the art he collects.
http://epublishingcorp.com/articlesRaichel/Art-News/Hymn.html   (1305 words)

  
 Books
The very fact that Saatchi has been seen to buy work by a particular artist is one way in which it is signalled that work by this individual is "valuable" and therefore worth buying.
However, it still gives quite a useful overview both of Charles Saatchi as a "super-collector" and of capitalism's ongoing relationship with art in general.
This indeed seems to be the case, as his influence on contemporary art is immense.
http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/feb01/booksfeb.html   (1970 words)

  
 BRITISH PAINTING STILL ROCKS!!
The multi-millionaire collector has sold many favorites from the Brit Art movement of the Nineties and reportedly told The Art Newspaper that the Young British Artists who made their name during the time may be "nothing but footnotes" in art history.
A young artist sneaked his own painting into the first day of a new Charles Saatchi exhibition yesterday, hoping to pass it off as a work acquired by Britain's biggest collector.
An artist sneaked a painting into the Saatchi Gallery in London to protest against the absence of British artists in a show, The Triumph of Painting: Part Two, that opened yesterday.
http://www.stuartsemple.com/rocks.htm   (636 words)

  
 Welcome to the Stuckism web site
This is the art that Stella Vine is practising.
We have criticised Charles Saatchi for his promotion of conceptual art, and lamented its pretentiousness, superficiality and emotional deprivation.
It is the idea that has emerged out of the collaboration of a group of artists over the last two decades and manifested in 1999 as Stuckism.
http://www.poetsinschool.com/Stuckism   (409 words)

  
 PaintingsDIRECT.com - Art Around the World
Charles Saatchi in addition to being multi-millionaire is Britain's foremost art collector.
An art historian and curator, he was previously Director of the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford and the Whitechapel Art Gallery.
He acknowledged that Saatchi talked to him about holding exhibitions, but said that at no point did he offer to give his collection to the Tate.
http://www.paintingsdirect.com/content/artaround/113004/artworld.html   (258 words)

  
 Blogcritics.org: Charles Saatchi takes on Blake Gopnik
The father of YBA art and one of the world's best-known art collectors is Charles Saatchi.
Saatchi: It wasn't terrifically amusing the first time dull people came up with this.
Saatchi: It's true that contemporary painting responds to the work of video makers and photographers.
http://blogcritics.org/archives/2004/12/05/174558.php   (496 words)

  
 SignOnSanDiego.com > News > World -- Fire destroys art warehouse in Britain
Other works from Saatchi's extensive private collection were destroyed at the warehouse owned by art handler and storer Momart.
LONDON &; A fire at an art storage warehouse is believed to have destroyed works by contemporary British artists worth millions of dollars, including part of a collection owned by former advertising guru Charles Saatchi, newspapers reported.
Among the pieces feared lost in Monday's blaze were works by Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin and the Chapman brothers – leading members of the 1990s Brit Art movement known for often shocking creations.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20040526-0547-britain-artfire.html   (367 words)

  
 Bloomberg.com: U.K.
Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Charles Saatchi, the millionaire British art collector, plans to move his gallery from London& South Bank to the city's Chelsea section in 2007 because of a disagreement with the landlord, Shirayama Shokusan Co. Ltd.
Saatchi, who has valued his collection at more than 200 million pounds ($353 million), opened the contemporary art gallery at the County Hall Building in 2003.
Collector Charles Saatchi to Move Gallery to London& Chelsea
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000102&sid=aqHT.OS44Qhg&refer=uk   (455 words)

  
 A Stuckist on Stuckism
Saatchi's successful worldwide promotion of Stella and her painting as his 'discovery' without any reference to her previous Stuckist involvement threatened to hijack important elements of our identity as his own innovation in art.
Saatchi swept into an artist's studio, bought their entire oeuvre in fifteen minutes and then, if they were lucky, gave them that amount of Warholian fame.
Art students now saw their goal not as producing good art, but as producing art which they hoped Saatchi would buy, and that art was known to be 'novelty art' for a self-confessed neophiliac.
http://www.stuckism.com/Walker/AStuckistOnStuckism.html   (10470 words)

  
 Charles Saatchi
On the eve of his gallery's 20th anniversary and its complete reinstalment with paintings, Charles Saatchi answers questions on the record for the first time ever.
But mostly, the answer is that installation art like Richard Wilson's oil room [purchased by Saatchi in 1990] is only buyable if you've got somewhere to exhibit it.
Being a good artist is the toughest job you could pick, and you have to be a little nuts to take it on.
http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/charlesqa/qa.htm   (3712 words)

  
 Telegraph Arts Saatchi seeks new horizons
None the less, Saatchi is planning to publish a hefty book and mount a three-part exhibition on the subject that will begin at the end of April at his temporary gallery space in Hoxton, east London.
In 2001, Saatchi's headlong plunge into collecting photographic works resulted in the ambitious I am a Camera exhibition, juxtaposing photography and painting, followed by New Labour, which looked at handicraft elements in contemporary art.
Consisting of his latest acquisitions in a variety of media - from painting, stitched art and photography to installations - it will be, promises Saatchi Gallery curator Jenny Blythe, "an interesting view, addressing landscape in the broader sense".
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2002/03/18/bamark18.xml&sSheet=/arts/2002/03/18/ixartleft.html   (620 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Saatchi Gallery Article
The Saatchi Gallery, a gallery for modern art was opened by Charles Saatchi in London, Spring 2003 and takes up 40,000 sq.ft. of space at County Hall, the Greater London Council's former headquarters on the South Bank.
The Saatchi Gallery, a gallery for modern art was opened by Charles Saatchi in London, Spring 2003 and takes up 40,000 sq.ft. of space at County Hall, the Greater London Council 's former headquarters...
On 24 May, 2004, a fire in a storage warehouse destroyed many works from the collection.
http://www.ipedia.com/saatchi_gallery.html   (142 words)

  
 Stuckists Tell Saatchi And Hirst "A Dead Shark Isn't Art"
It's no coincidence that across town Charles Saatchi has just opened a gallery to showcase his spectacular collection of contemporary art, amongst which is a 17-foot embalmed tiger shark.
The new bankside art gallery needs no introduction and neither does one of its most notorious exhibits, but what the Stuckists want to do is not only question Damien Hirst's work, but to confront the basis of the conceptual art that he and Mr Saatchi have helped make famous.
A donation is being made by the gallery to Eddie Saunders' nominated charity, Parents of Redbridge Retarded Youth.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/sharks/innews/stuckist2003.html   (543 words)

  
 NewsFromRussia.Com London art gallery to be moved from Country Hall
Last year, however, Saatchi announced he was stripping his London gallery of the provocative "Brit Art" installations that made his name and replacing them with works in the more traditional medium of painting.
Art collector Charles Saatchi announced Tuesday he was relocating his London art gallery, accusing the landlord at his current site of creating a "malevolent atmosphere." More details...
The Saatchi Gallery, home to a large collection of contemporary British art, announced it would move from the former County Hall building on the south bank of the River Thames in 2007.
http://newsfromrussia.com/science/2005/09/27/63852.html   (1729 words)

  
 Indiantelevision dot com's Media, Advertising & Marketing Watch : Ad "guru" Charles Saatchi's art gallery ...
LONDON: Advertising guru Charles Saatchi has left his mark not just on the advertising world but also on everyone who loves arts and culture.
The 100-plus pieces on display at the gallery is but a fraction of Saatchi's 2,000-plus collection of contemporary arts works.
A BBC report states that the gallery highlights work by some of the most notorious young British contemporary artists and by other international names.
http://www.indiantelevision.com/mam/headlines/y2k3/apr/aprmam51.htm   (165 words)

  
 Flowers for Homestead at Dulwich Picture Gallery
But, at 37, she appears to be mellowing… Emin says she knew she had matured when ‘I was at Vivienne’s [Westwood] party, Mrs Thatcher was there and I didn’t spit at her’.
Nothing illustrates better how little this wave of artists have to say than their dependence on a man who made his money from, among other things, helping Thatcher stay in power with his advertising (5).
I therefore resent people like Frick, Tate and Saatchi having any say in the running of cultivated pursuits such as fine art.
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Senate/7672/flowers.html   (1058 words)

  
 Bloomberg.com: Culture
After turning Saatchi and Saatchi into the world's biggest advertising agency, brothers Maurice and Charles were ousted when debt soared a decade ago.
One of the best-known works lost by Saatchi was ``Hell,'' a tableau of miniature German soldiers made by the Turner Prize- nominated Chapman brothers.
Axa Art of the U.K., which also insured some of Momart& customers, had no comment on the case, said spokeswoman Helen George.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000088&sid=arVRfeGc04lY&refer=culture   (942 words)

  
 Independent Women's Forum
Now, Saatchi has made the U.K. papers again, throwing a hissy fit over the landlord of his fancy gallery just on the south bank of the Thames and deciding to park his high art elsewhere.
So Saatchi, accusing Okamoto of creating a "malevolent atmosphere" is clearing out and taking his wares to a site in Chelsea.
From Marcus Harvey’s portrait of Myra Hindley to Damien Hirst’s animals, he has long favoured works that demonstrate the general wretchedness, cruelty and banality of modern life.
http://www.iwf.org/inkwell?archiveID=1590   (6375 words)

  
 Telegraph News Charles Saatchi could have bought four Davids for the price of Tracey Emin's bed
Dr Cook, the curator of medieval and early modern coinage at the British Museum, said that as a numismatist, it was beyond his job description to comment on the relative merits and worth of Michelangelo and the Britartists.
Just over a decade ago, one of his first commissions - from Saatchi again - was The Physical Impossibility of Death in Someone Living, his pickled shark in a tank.
Charles Saatchi has been called a modern-day Medici.
http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/01/07/nart07.xml   (791 words)

  
 BBC - Press Office - Imagine
Beginning with The Saatchi Phenomenon, the strand covers the arts in their broadest sense - from ballet to fashion, sculpture to hip hop, literature to Brit art.
Imagine - BBC ONE's new arts strand - aims to capture the power and effect that the arts can have and the people who have changed our way of looking at the world through their art.
I've always been passionate about the arts so this opportunity to present a major new strand on BBC ONE was irresistible.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2003/05_may/23/imagine.shtml   (429 words)

  
 Art News Blog: Charles Saatchi Interview - got a question?
The Art Newspaper will be interviewing the Brit art collector Charles Saatchi and is asking its readers to send their questions in to be answered.
Email your queries for Mr Saatchi to: saatchi (at) theartnewspaper.com or post them to: Charles Saatchi c/o The Art Newspaper, 70 South Lambeth Road, London, SW8 1RL.
Please include your name, address, and a contact email or telephone number.
http://www.artnewsblog.com/2004/10/charles-saatchi-interview-got-question.htm   (156 words)

  
 Cordiant & Saatchi: Overview
There is a mordant account of Charles as art patron in Supercollector: A Critique of Charles Saatchi, (London: Ellipsis 2000) by Rita Hatton & John Walker.
1970 Maurice Saatchi, Charles Saatchi and Tim Bell found Saatchi and Saatchi
This profile deals with the Cordiant Communications Group (which was swallowed by WPP in 2003) and the Saatchis.
http://www.ketupa.net/cordiant.htm   (729 words)

  
 ArtLex's E-Em page
Contemporary artists like those in 'Sensation' [NY exhibit of works by young British artists, owned by adman Charles Saatchi] expect you to relate to their work on their terms."
Michael Kimmelman, American art critic, New York Times, October 1, 1999, B29.
It is cut off from the rest of the world to the extent thatthat it chooses to be.
http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/E.html   (4441 words)

  
 Biography.com - Saatchi & Saatchi
» Advertisers: Charles Saatchi (1943&;) and Maurice Saatchi (1946–), born in Iraq.
Maurice was made a Lord in 1996 and became a shadow Treasury spokesman.
In 1995, following a controversial share option package, chairman Maurice Saatchi left the company, and with his brother set up a new agency, M&C Saatchi.
http://www.biography.com/find/article.jsp?aid=9468614&search=   (139 words)

  
 BA invite bids for $106 mln ad account - Boston.com - Europe - News
The Saatchi brothers, whose former agency Saatchi and Saatchi is now part of France's Publicis, won the account in 1982 when the airline was owned by the government.
British Airways is inviting advertising agencies to bid for its 60 million pound ($106 million) account for the first time in a decade and after a 23-year relationship with flamboyant British ad executives Maurice and Charles Saatchi.
is inviting advertising agencies to bid for its 60 million pound ($106 million) account for the first time in a decade and after a 23-year relationship with flamboyant British ad executives Maurice and Charles Saatchi.
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2005/07/05/ba_invite_bids_for_106_mln_ad_account?mode=PF   (516 words)

  
 Nigella Lawson biography
In an interview with Nigella Lawson in Sainsbury's Magazine, she said of Charles Saatchi:
Nigella's partner, the advertising guru, Charles Saatchi, does not seem to care that much about her culianry skills.
In autumn 2002 Nigella Lawson produced another book and TV series - Forever Summer.
http://www.biogs.com/famous/lawsonnigella.html   (303 words)

  
 Ad Age Advertising Century: People: Maurice and Charles Saatchi
Ad Age Advertising Century: People: Maurice and Charles Saatchi
The brothers Saatchi thereupon created M&C Saatchi - a small London-based agency - while Saatchi & Saatchi survived, and WPP Group grew to be one of the top three holding companies.
And the brothers' financial officer, Martin Sorrell, would split off in '86 to create WPP Group, acquire J. Walter Thompson Co. in '87 and build a rival marketing network.
http://www.adage.com/century/people008.html   (182 words)

  
 Charles Saatchi - anagrams
Find anagram aliases of charles saatchi (or any other text)!
Find gold service anagrams of charles saatchi (or any other text)!
http://www.anagramgenius.com/archive/charles-saatchi.html   (29 words)

  
 BBC - BBC Four Documentaries - The Men from the Agency
David Puttnam, Alan Parker and Charles Saatchi all worked for the agency that revolutionised British advertising - Collett, Dickenson, Pearce.
When they started there, advertising was seen as a backwater.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documentaries/features/men-from-agency.shtml   (176 words)

  
 Daily Telegraph (London, England): Europeans battle for rare works; Contemporary sales - Charles Saatchi and Jay ...
Europeans battle for rare works; Contemporary sales - Charles Saatchi and Jay Jopling were among the leading buyers who locked horns at Christie's and Sotheby's London auctions.(Features)
Daily Telegraph (London, England): Europeans battle for rare works; Contemporary sales - Charles Saatchi and Jay Jopling were among the leading buyers who locked horns at Christie's and Sotheby's London auctions.(Features)@ HighBeam Research
http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?refid=ovav_key&docid=1G1:70346817   (259 words)

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