Belgian Star Arne Quinze at Vicky David

When we actually decided to take this crazy journey (in the middle of a night on January 11) one thing was clear: we wanted to end our adventures in London. It's obviously a crucial year for British art, with Damien unsurprisingly leading the elite, royal dog pack on this side of the pond. It also felt right to end the trip in London, because that's where most of the spots were born.
We weren't planning to be in at our final destination so soon originally. We wanted to check in the hotel, possibly see National Portrait Gallery, and then hit the remaining Gagosians on Saturday morning. But thanks to unrelenting supporter text messages and more than few e-mails (and a very helpful attendant Sebastian at EuroStar upgrade desk in Paris) we boarded an early train to St. Pancras. Two hours earlier than expected.
It felt epic to be greeted by the Olympic rings in the station and our pulses started running once we realized that this nearly 8-day journey was coming to an end. But in a very epic way. The Britannia location is only five minutes from Paris express and the pit stop turned into a real celebration. First, we got to meet most of the staffers working on this blockbuster show (there are at least a dozen!), then they generously applauded us, and after we posed for many pictures. And then more photos. It's only then that we understood that we finished this crazy thing first.
Still, the final cab ride to Davies with our driver Peter felt jittery. Maybe it was the realization that this undertaking (comprised of more miles in one week than you'd want to imagine) was ending after a twenty minute cab drive. At Mayfair, Davis' godmothers Jade and Emma greeted us with cold bubbly (with new friends from Britannia joining us there too) and a serious Damien merch themed goody bag. We got our historic final stamp, posed for more photos, and then got to absorb the intimate, final spots show, filled with exhilarating, tiny (mostly circa 1996) fellas.
How did it feel to finally end this passage? Well, we crashed for the first time in 8 days at our nearby hotel at Oxford Street. But only for sixty minutes. Then we felt proud, relieved, spent, happy, hopeful and alert…while answering dozens of friends’ e-mails and updating the Twitter board. But art journey will continue tomorrow with more shows here in London…with absolutely no stamps on the line.
3960 via Art Box


The Vicky David Gallery is presenting an exhibition of the Belgian artist Arne Quinze until late March.
3961 via http://vickydavid.com/


Louise Bourgeois: Conscious and Unconscious comes to full life in Qatar.
3962 via Qatar Museums Authority

| Keywords | ||
![]() |
Arne Quinze, Belgian Artist, The Vicky David Gallery | ![]() |





