Lars Fassinger
Urban art dealer and curator Steve Lazarides is celebrating ten years in the business with the landmark exhibition "Still Here, A Decade Of Lazarides" at his namesake gallery in Soho, London.

He gives us an insight into his eventful life and career through a selection of images from his personal Instagram account.
Steve Lazarides
"Here's the cover of a zine we made to celebrate the tenth anniversary of Lazarides Gallery and just to remind everyone that we are, in fact, all still here."
Steve Lazarides
"I was very happy to receive this new painting for the tenth anniversary exhibition from Zevs, who I've worked with for a number of years. It's a completely new direction for him that I like very much."
Steve Lazarides
"Being a die-hard birdwatcher, this painting by Xenz in our tenth anniversary show is very close to my heart. It reminds me a great deal of my childhood when there were still millions of wonderful birds flying around. Unfortunately I'm not sure that's the case anymore."
Steve Lazarides
"This is a piece from the Banksy show I recently curated in Istanbul. We only took it out of the crate on the day of the exhibition, not realizing that the suicide belt had been added to the sculpture at some point by Banksy; all this happened on the day 11 tourists were killed by a bomb in the city."
Steve Lazarides
"My kids have absolutely no respect for the artworks or the artists behind them in my house. You can tell by the addition of this wonderful moustache to an Antony Micallef painting hanging in my house."
Steve Lazarides
"This wonderful old chap turned up at our Lazarides stand at Contemporary Istanbul last year. Several confused hours and lots of laughter later, we found out he was the model for the JR painting hanging in the show."
Steve Lazarides
"This is me and JR having a rare moment of peace together before the opening of his Lazarides exhibition last year. He's probably one of the busiest artists in the world (and my phone's constantly ringing) so it was a great pleasure. We gave him his first exhibition in his 20s, so it's incredible to see how far he's come."
Steve Lazarides
"Before the opening of the same JR show, our mutual friend José Parlá was in town and stopped by early to see us both. It was a great pleasure."
Steve Lazarides
"This is an early picture of Banksy at work, from many years ago, when he was first starting out. Here he was adding to an unofficial street art exhibition in Rivington Street in Shoreditch, while I documented the whole thing with my camera."
Steve Lazarides
"I love this Jonathan Yeo piece. It brings back many memories of me putting together his 2010 'Porn in the USA' exhibition in Beverley Hills, LA in a massive old derelict shop. I think the works of art and the show itself were one of the best shows we've ever done."
Steve Lazarides
"I feel like this most mornings. It's a great piece by an artist called Mark Jenkins who we've worked with for many years. Mark works across the world, adorning streets with weird and wonderful sculptures like this one."
Steve Lazarides
"These are six Banksy prints from a show I did for Sotheby's S2 in 2014, taken from my personal collection. I warned Sotheby's how busy the show would be but I'm not sure they believed me... They had over 15,000 people in two weeks. I think it was one of the busiest shows they've ever had."
Steve Lazarides
"This is a photograph of artworks by my good pal Robert del Naja (aka Massive Attack's 3D). It took me about a decade to make him confident enough as an artist to do an exhibition, so it was a real pleasure seeing him pull together all these works."
Steve Lazarides
"This was a day at Antony Micallef's studio, which is full of fantastic surprises (normally in the form of paintings). I've worked with Antony for a very long period of time and consider him a good friend."

Story highlights

"Accidental" art dealer Steve Lazarides has worked with some of the biggest names in street art

Though they parted ways in 2009, he is often credited with launching Banksy's career

Lazarides Gallery's latest exhibition Still Here, A Decade Of Lazarides is open now

CNN  — 

Over the last decade, London-based Bristol-born art dealer Steve Lazarides has worked with some of the biggest names in international street art.

Lars Fassinger
Steve Lazarides by Lars Fassinger

This month, the 47-year-old has launched a landmark exhibition, celebrating ten years of his Lazarides Gallery. It will take up three floors of the Lazarides Rathbone venue and feature over 30 artists, including British trailblazer Banksy, portraitist Jonathan Yeo, and French social art provocateur JR.

These artists have been key to Lazarides’ artistic career, as he has championed underground art, blurring the boundaries between the gallery and the street. Each artist has created work that references major issues of their times while working with Lazarides.

The exhibition showcases new pieces from the artists, alongside a selection of old favorites.

An ‘accidental art dealer’

Zevs
Oil Painting BP Pink / Red, 2015, Zevs
Vhils Collapse
Collapse 5, 2015, Vhils
Nina Pandolfo
To Dream, 2016, Nina Pandolfo
Katrin Fridriks
Magic & Noble Awakening, 2016, Katrin Fridriks
JR Le Havre
Women Are Heroes, Elizabeth Kamanga on sea, Le Havre, France, 2014, JR
Faile
This One's Just Right, 2016, FAILE
Chloe Early
Long Haul Lullaby, 2016, Chloe Early
Anthony Lister
Monkey Prank, 2016, Anthony Lister
Doug Foster
Fortuna's Wheel, 2016, Doug Foster
Doug Foster
Fortuna's Wheel, 2016, Doug Foster
Doug Foster
Fortuna's Wheel, 2016, Doug Foster
Doug Foster
Fortuna's Wheel, 2016, Doug Foster
Doug Foster
Fortuna's Wheel, 2016, Doug Foster

“Everything in this show demonstrates progression,” explained Lazarides, “from when the artist started 10 years ago to where they are now.”

The photographer JR, for example, has worked with Lazarides for nearly a decade.

“Most people know who he is now, but I’ve worked with this guy since he was 24-years-old. We gave him his first show, then at 31 he had Robert De Niro starring in a short movie for him.”

Steve Lazarides describes himself as an “accidental art dealer”. He had numerous jobs in professions such as a builder, painter and decorator, set builder and picture editor, before he began photographing renowned street artist, and fellow Bristolian, Banksy.

The man behind Banksy

Noticing something relatively untouched at the time, Lazarides became Banksy’s art dealer and is often credited with having launched his career.

“No one else was showing this kind of work and no one was giving people like this an opportunity. And now there’s a million of them worldwide, showing terrible art”, he said.

He believes there was a “grudging respect” between them but admits, “we were never particularly good friends.”

The two parted ways in 2009 but Lazarides continues to use and promote Banksy’s work in various exhibitions.

He recently launched an exhibition at Global Karaköy in Istanbul entitled “The Art of Banksy” but, he says, Banksy was not involved in the project.

“Absolutely not. Not one single iota.”

Seeing potential in the project and where it was set, Lazarides explained, “I knew he wouldn’t be happy but he’s done many things that have made me unhappy over the years. What I did think, and this is true, is that the power of the work there is massive.”

A new investment

Lazarides has recently announced an investment by Qatari businessman Wissam Al Mana, Janet Jackson’s husband, who is rumored to be worth seven figures. The collaboration, he says, came by chance.

“He randomly bowled up at the gallery one Monday morning where he promptly got turned away but then came back later,” he said, laughing.

“So we ended up hitting it off and he has a genuine interest in what we do. […] I’m sure he could find much better uses for his money than putting it here if he was just interested in making money.”

The investment, he said, will enable him to “take the whole sorry show to Mayfair and see what trouble we can cause in the belly of the beast.

“It’s trying to prove to people that this work is worth being in Mayfair. It deserves to be there. There’s no reason why it shouldn’t be other than prejudice.”

‘Still Here, A Decade Of Lazarides’

Before he begins the next chapter, Lazarides is celebrating the last ten.

“For me, it really is a full stop. That’s one decade over. Most of us survived it.”

The current exhibition then, is about proving to people “that you can be successful without having to just go along one route. I think that’s what I’m aiming for… and global domination of course.”

The exhibition ‘Still Here, A Decade Of Lazarides’ runs from 12 February to 24 March 2016.