Damien Hirst’s wide-ranging practice – installations, sculpture, painting and drawing – has sought to challenge the boundaries between art, science and popular culture. His energy and inventiveness, and his consistently visceral, visually arresting work, has made him a leading artist of his generation.
Hirst explores the uncertainty at the core of human experience; love, life, death, loyalty and betrayal through unexpected and unconventional media. Best known for the ‘Natural History’ works, which present animals in vitrines suspended in formaldehyde such as the iconic The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living (1991) and Mother and Child Divided (1993), his works recast fundamental questions concerning the meaning of life and the fragility of biological existence. For Hirst, the vitrine functions as both window and barrier, seducing the viewer into the work visually while providing a minimalist geometry to frame, contain and objectify his subject. In many of the sculptures of the 1990s, such as The Acquired Inability to Escape (1991) and The Asthmatic Escaped (1992) a human presence was implied through the inclusion of relic-like objects: clothes, cigarettes, ashtrays, tables and chairs. That implied human presence became explicit in Ways of Seeing (2000), a vitrine sculpture with a figure of a laboratory technician seated at a desk looking through a microscope. The more celebratory work Hymn (2000), a polychrome bronze sculpture, reveals the anatomical musculature and internal organs of the human body on a monumental scale. Hirst is equally renowned for his paintings. These include his ‘Butterfly Paintings’, tableaux of actual butterflies suspended in paint, or in Amazing Revelations (2003), for instance, he arranged thousands of butterfly wings in a mandala-like pattern. His ‘Spin’ series are made with a machine that centrifugally disperses the paint steadily poured onto a shaped canvas surface, while his ‘Spot’ series have a rigorous grid of uniform sized dots. Recently, he has explored photo-realism in the ‘Fact’ paintings.
Damien Hirst was born in 1965 in Bristol, UK. He lives and works in London and Devon. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions including Into Me / Out of Me, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2006), In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, Tate Britain, the 50th Venice Biennale (2003) and Century City, Tate Modern (2001). Solo exhibitions include Astrup Fearnley Museet fur Moderne Kunst, Oslo (2005), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2005) and Archaeological Museum, Naples (2004). He received the DAAD fellowship in Berlin in 1994 and the Turner Prize in 1995.
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| Artworks | |
![]() | Vitrine works I 4 Images |
![]() | Spin paintings 4 Images |
![]() | Vitrine works II 4 Images |
![]() | Butterfly paintings 4 Images |
![]() | Miscellaneous 4 Images |
![]() | Miscellaneous II 4 Images |
![]() | Miscellaneous III 4 Images |
![]() | Medicine Cabinets 4 Images |
![]() | Spot paintings 2 Images |
| Related Texts | |
| CV | |
| Bibliography | |
| Exhibitions | |
| Beyond Belief 3 Jun—7 Jul 2007 | |
| Romance in the Age of Uncertainty 10 Sep—19 Oct 2003 | |
| Still 19 May—1 Jul 1995 | |
| Editions | |
| For the Love of God, Believe Edition of 1700 | |
| For the Love of God, Laugh Edition of 250 | |
| For the Love of God, Pray Edition of 750 | |
| For the Love of God, Shine Edition of 250 | |
| For the Love of God, The Diamond Skull Edition of 250 | |
| Untitled Pill and Syringe 1 Edition of 200 | |
| Untitled Pill and Syringe 2 Edition of 300 | |
| Untitled Pill and Syringe 3 Edition of 400 | |
| Artist's Publications | |
| Damien Hirst 2004 | |
| The Cancer Chronicles 2003 | |
| Artist's Publications Available in the Bookshop |
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| Beyond Belief 2008 | |
| For the Love of God The Making of the Diamond Skull 2007 | |
| Romance in the Age of Uncertainty 2003 | |
| Related Links | |
| http://www.damienhirst.com/ Damien Hirst | |
| http://www.othercriteria.com Other Criteria | |
| http://www.tate.org.uk/phar... Tate Online | |
| http://www.tate.org.uk/brit... Tate Online | |
| Back to Artist Index |