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Complaint filed against Saatchi

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Charles Saatchi -- the advertising mogul who turns young British artists into international stars by buying their work in bulk and displaying it in a museum-like London gallery -- is no stranger to art-world controversy. But one of his adversaries has upped the ante by taking his grievance to the British government.

London art dealer Charles Thomson has submitted a formal complaint to the Office of Fair Trading, alleging that Saatchi’s tactics are monopolistic and anti-competitive.

In a five-page letter, Thomson -- who promotes relatively conservative art, dubbed Stuckist by those who claim that his artists are stuck in the past -- stated that Saatchi abuses his position and unfairly squeezes out the competition. But what appears to have pushed Thomson over the edge is that his former wife, Stella Vine, a stripper turned painter, is being hailed as one of Saatchi’s new discoveries.

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Thomson told the London Independent that he, not Saatchi, had nurtured Vine’s talent. “As soon as Stella got in the media promoted by Saatchi I realized that we were being airbrushed out of the picture,” he told the newspaper. “How can I get my view across when I don’t have a massive marketing firm to issue stuff that gets printed worldwide simultaneously?”

A spokesman for the Office of Fair Trading said an investigation would be launched if there are grounds for suspicion that Saatchi has breached the British Competition Art.

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