Crusoe Contemporary

Crusoe Contemporary Private Art Advisory | Est 2020.

Born Marquis Lewis in Los Angeles, Retna first gained attention after painting murals across the city’s streets. His wor...
22/03/2026

Born Marquis Lewis in Los Angeles, Retna first gained attention after painting murals across the city’s streets. His work is instantly recognisable for its distinctive script, a visual language that blends influences from graffiti, calligraphy, and symbols drawn from cultures around the world.

As his style evolved, Retna’s work moved from the street into galleries and international collections, while still holding onto the bold lettering that made it stand out from the beginning. Today, his pieces sit at the meeting point of street culture and contemporary art.

For collectors, that recognisable language, and the story behind how it developed, is what gives the work lasting appeal.

James McQueen – Volume II LenticularJan 2025: £1,781 → Sold: £3,000 (£2,685 after fees)Works from James McQueen’s lentic...
20/03/2026

James McQueen – Volume II Lenticular
Jan 2025: £1,781 → Sold: £3,000 (£2,685 after fees)

Works from James McQueen’s lenticular series have been drawing steady interest from collectors. The pieces play with movement and layered imagery, giving a modern edge to themes that mirror the bold visual language associated with the McQueen name.

As attention around the artist continues to grow, pieces like these are being watched more closely in the secondary market. When prices move in a measured way like this, it can be a sign that demand is building rather than spiking.

18/03/2026

Thinking about investing in art but not sure where to start?

Visiting our showroom is often the first step. Seeing the work in person helps you understand scale, quality, and what really resonates with you before making any decisions.

During your visit, our team walks you through the market, explains why certain pieces are being watched closely, and helps identify artworks that could suit both your taste and investment goals. Every portfolio starts with a conversation and a clear understanding of what you’re trying to achieve.

If you’re curious on where to start, we’d love to welcome you in by booking a visit through the link in our bio.

Unveiled in 2007, ‘For the Love of God’ is one of Damien Hirst’s most provocative and widely discussed works. A platinum...
16/03/2026

Unveiled in 2007, ‘For the Love of God’ is one of Damien Hirst’s most provocative and widely discussed works. A platinum cast of an 18th-century human skull, encrusted with over 8,000 diamonds, the piece confronts mortality through extreme material contrast – transforming a universal symbol of death into an object of spectacle and desire.

More than shock value, the work was a statement about value itself: what we assign worth to, how art is commodified, the relationship between art and money. At the height of the pre-financial crisis market, it redefined expectations around pricing, publicity, and artistic ambition.

Today, it remains a defining image of early 21st-century art – not simply for its material excess, but for how boldly it challenged the structure of the contemporary art world.

Charles Hollywood, the rising UK-based duo formed by two brothers balances professional football with artistic practice,...
14/03/2026

Charles Hollywood, the rising UK-based duo formed by two brothers balances professional football with artistic practice, continue to build momentum with text-driven works that reflect modern culture in real time.

This private commission was developed collaboratively with the collector and delivered in person – a process that makes the piece as personal as it is culturally current. Their work reflects sport and modern life in a direct way.

For collectors, that authenticity – and the story behind it – is what gives the piece staying power.

At Crusoe Contemporary, we specialise in investment-grade works from headline names such as Banksy, Pop artists, and Pic...
12/03/2026

At Crusoe Contemporary, we specialise in investment-grade works from headline names such as Banksy, Pop artists, and Picasso.

There’s a common misconception that access to artists of this calibre requires vast capital. In reality, opportunity often lies in understanding edition structure, timing, and market positioning. By combining auction analytics with our own experience, we identify works we believe have the potential to outperform more traditional asset classes.

For us, it’s not about speculation – it’s about clarity, research, and knowing where cultural relevance and market data intersect.

Andy Warhol — Ladies & Gentlemen (Set)2019: £69,821 → 2023: £119,625Warhol’s Ladies & Gentlemen series has seen steady g...
10/03/2026

Andy Warhol — Ladies & Gentlemen (Set)
2019: £69,821 → 2023: £119,625

Warhol’s Ladies & Gentlemen series has seen steady growth in recent years. Created in the 1970s, the works focus on identity rather than celebrity – a shift that feels increasingly relevant today.

Complete sets are becoming harder to find, and collectors are paying closer attention to this part of Warhol’s practice. When interest builds gradually like this, it often points to sustained demand rather than a short-lived rise.

At Crusoe Contemporary, we focus on movements like these – where research, timing, and context matter more than hype.

Damien Hirst emerged in the late 1980s as a central figure of the Young British Artists, quickly becoming one of the mos...
08/03/2026

Damien Hirst emerged in the late 1980s as a central figure of the Young British Artists, quickly becoming one of the most recognisable names in contemporary art. His work challenges ideas of life, death, value, and belief – from formaldehyde installations and medicine cabinets to his celebrated spot and butterfly paintings.

What defines Hirst isn’t just shock or spectacle, but his ability to question how art is made, sold, and understood. He has consistently blurred the line between concept and commerce, reshaping the role of the contemporary artist in the global market.

Today, Hirst remains a significant force – both culturally and commercially – with key series continuing to attract sustained collector interest worldwide.

David Hockney – ‘The Pool Series’Few images are as immediately associated with an artist as the swimming pool is with Da...
06/03/2026

David Hockney – ‘The Pool Series’

Few images are as immediately associated with an artist as the swimming pool is with David Hockney. Created after his move to Los Angeles in the 1960s, the pool works captured more than sunlight and surface – they marked a shift toward clarity, space, and a distinctly Californian way of living.

Beneath their calm composition lies careful structure. Hockney was fascinated by the challenge of painting water: something transparent, constantly moving, and defined only by light. The pools became a way of exploring perception itself – how we see, distort, and reconstruct space.

Over time, the series has come to represent a defining moment in post-war British art, where place, identity, and modern life converge. For collectors, the appeal lies not only in their visual immediacy but also in their position at the centre of Hockney’s wider story – works that continue to hold cultural weight as well as market strength.

04/03/2026

The art market doesn’t always move in line with stocks and shares. It often follows its own path. For collectors, that can matter. A well-chosen piece can bring balance to a portfolio when other markets feel unsettled. It’s not just something to hang on the wall – it can offer stability when things elsewhere feel uncertain. Sometimes, independence is the real strength.

Jean-Michel Basquiat – Charles the First2023: £60,960 → 2024: £84,014That’s a +37.8% increase over 1 year.Basquiat’s ‘Ch...
02/03/2026

Jean-Michel Basquiat – Charles the First
2023: £60,960 → 2024: £84,014
That’s a +37.8% increase over 1 year.

Basquiat’s ‘Charles the First’ remains one of the most recognisable and symbolically layered works within his body of work. Referencing Charlie Parker while exploring themes of power, race, and cultural mythology, the image carries the urgency and intellectual depth that define Basquiat’s legacy.

This rise reflects continued demand for Basquiat’s most recognisable works. As institutional focus on 1980s American art continues to expand, collectors are placing greater weight on pieces that sit at the centre of an artist’s narrative rather than at its margins.

At Crusoe Contemporary, we look beyond short-term fluctuations. When a work that represents the core of an artist’s practice shows this level of growth, it often suggests steady, long-term interest rather than short-lived momentum.

Address

4th Floor, Silverstream House, 45 Fitzroy Street
London
W1T6EB

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

+447729274654

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