Home to a close-knit, multi-ethnic community,
the 24-storey tower in a deprived housing estate was reduced to
a charred ruin by the inferno that engulfed it in the middle of
the night.
Many survivors have yet to be rehoused and are still living in
hotels.
The charity auction, to be held at Sotheby's on Monday, includes
works by A-list artists including Wolfgang Tillmans, Antony
Gormley, Tracey Emin, Sarah Lucas, Mark Wallinger and Rachel
Whiteread.
The proceeds from the auction, which Sotheby's estimates will
range between 700,000 and 1 million pounds ($926,000-$1.3
million), will be divided equally among 158 surviving families.
Film producer Hamish McAlpine, an art collector who was one of
the driving forces behind the auction, said the Grenfell tragedy
had had a huge emotional impact on Londoners, including the
city's vibrant artistic community.
"Grenfell touched their souls," he said in an interview at
Sotheby's in an airy gallery where the donated artworks are on
display. "It's a very emotive subject for people in London."
It would normally take six to nine months to organize an auction
on this scale, but McAlpine and art consultant Katie Heller were
able to put this one together in about 10 weeks thanks to the
positive response from almost all the artists.
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McAlpine said famous artists were constantly bombarded with requests
to donate works for charity and could not always give, but in this
case almost everyone had agreed immediately.
"There has been an extraordinary generosity within the artists'
community," he said. "To give a work that's worth hundreds of
thousands of pounds, for free, it really is a magical thing."
One of the works, "Lay the Dust with Tears" by Tacita Dean, was
created especially for the auction. A gray and black image made with
charcoal on paper, it is evocative of billowing smoke.
Other works that already existed have been renamed by the artists to
honor the victims of the fire.
"Red Lens for Grenfell" by Anish Kapoor is a thick acrylic disc,
reminiscent of lenses used in lighthouses, while a black-and-white
photograph by Sarah Lucas has been renamed "Eating a Banana (for
Grenfell)".
The most valuable artwork for sale is "Freischwimmer 193" by
Wolfgang Tillmans, a very large green print. The estimated price
range is 120,000 to 180,000 pounds.
(Editing by Stephen Addison)
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