“If you admit to yourself what it means to be an artist,
then the best way to do it is to give up making art, and put what you’ve got into
other people” (Damien Hirst,1997, p. 15).
Damien Hirst is an English artist which was born in 1965 in
Bristol. He became famous with the exhibition under the title “Freeze” in
1988. After this exhibition, Charles Saatchi, the art collector, began to
collect Damien’s work (Art Directory). He also bought Damien’s “A Thousand
years” ( lenin Imports,
2004). He also held an exhibition under the title of “In
and Out of Love” in 1991, in which he filled the gallery with hundreds of
living tropical butterflies. His works can be organized in three categories: paintings,
cage-like sculptures, and aquarium-like pieces. His paintings also could be
divided into two categories: spot paintings and spinning paintings. The
pharmaceutical and medical paraphernalia production are counted as cage-like
category, and the cows, the sheep, and the shark which are preserved in
formaldehyde are counted as aquarium-like category (Archive). His art works are
mysterious, minimalism,
and involves thoughts. “Life and Death” is the main idea of his works; as he
said: “I want to spend the rest of my life everywhere, with everyone, one to
one, always, forever, now” (Eslamieh, 2011)
He did a lot of
series work and those are so famous, for instance, The Natural History series
in which dead animals are preserved in formaldehyde in an aquarium. Their
titles show the thoughts and his will and the cover. It just can't
be described by words. You may even not understand, nor visualise it without
experiencing it first.(Lenin Imports, 2004).
The Natural History
series, the ones which animals are preserved in formaldehyde, are the most
famous ones and also the most controversial ones. Between all of these
formaldehyde works we can name the most amazing and probably the most famous
one “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living”(1991),
the huge tiger shark preserved in the formaldehyde shown at the Saatchi gallery.[Archive].
In this art work, Damien shows the frenzy of death with the shark (Smith, 2007).
Damien Hirst, The Physical Impossibility of Death, 1991
Damien Hirst, The Physical Impossibility of Death, 1991
He knows his art in
a sophisticated simplicity. In one of his works, he puts some unique fish in
the shelf-like aquarium in the formaldehyde liquid, which it looks like his
spot paintings also, in the same direction. “All the fish are swimming in one
direction, to understanding” (Eslamieh, 2011).
Damien Hirst,Isolated Elements Swimming in the Same Direction for the Purpose of Understanding (Right), 1991
Damien has done
many works in the cage-like categories in which he exhibit his art in the glass
room. Damien says, “I really love glass, a material which is very solid, is
dangerous but transparent. The idea of being able to see everything but not
able to touch, solid but invisible. The slits in the glass are very important
to the work; you need some sort of acces” (Lenin Imports, 2004). He inspired
the structure of the works and industrial material by seeing the art works of
an American minimalism Grenville
Davey and Tony Cragg.
Damien also influenced the technique of drawing of framing the objects and
figures within the box by Francis
Bacon. Of bacon’s adding frame to his art
works Hirst says, “it’s a doorway, it’s a window, it’s two dimensional, it’s
three dimensional; he is thinking about glass reflection” (Faber and Faber,
2001, p.68).
A Thousand Years is
probably one of his the most important
art work. It is similar to a hundred years which has done in the same
year (1990). In both works there is a glass room that divided by a glass
partition that has some whole on it. In one half room, there is a white box and
newly hatched flies and still alive flies are inside the room, and in another
half there is an insect-o-cutor hangs and all dead flies cover the floor. The
difference between a thousand years and a hundred years is in the a thousand
years there is a decaying cow’s head immersed in the blood! (Faber and Faber,
2001, p.128). He explains his work, “I’ve shown you life and death of these
flies, and also I’ve shown they are eating and dying” (Eslamieh, 2011).
In many of Damien’s
works which involves animals, except a thousand years, they are not suppose to
go through any natural disintegrate. Actually he faced a lot of problems
to keep them in formaldehyde and preserve them. People had asked Damien many
times that whether he is thought about corpses will eventually decay anyway. He replies that he doesn’t care because the
idea is more important than the actual piece. As long as they remain until he
is alive, and he doesn’t care about what will happen to them after (Lenin Imports,
2004).
Medical
paraphernalia is one of his themes in cage-like categories in which he inspired
by pharmacy tools and pieces(Lenin Imports, 2004). He believes that “All the
medicines which are there between birth and death to keep us alive” (Damien
Hirst, 1997, p.225)
Damien Hirst, Pharmacy, 1992
Damien Hirst, Pharmacy, 1992
Damien Hirst, Pharmacy, 1992
Damien Hirst, Pharmacy, 1992
Hirst also has done
many paintings inspired by pharmaceutical, deuterated compounds,
and controlled substances. Probably most of you are familiar with the “spot”
painting. He has done several of these accurate graded and the same sized
painted dots in the different size of canvases and different arrangement of
colours (Venetian Red, 2008). He believes that “there is similar
scientific approach to the life between paintings and drug companies but it
doesn’t mean that art have all the answers, but drug companies do”. In these
paintings applying grid structure is the beginning of the system. You can not
find the same two colours in the same painting (I want to spend the rest
of my life everywhere, with everyone, one to one, always, forever, now. 1997, p.246).
Damien hirst, Anthraquinone-1-Diazonium Chloride,1994
Damien Hirst, Spot paintings
Damien also recorded
many theme art works. Cigarette is one of his themes. For instance, Part Time
is one of his cigarette’s theme works. In this piece he minimized the life
cycle into a huge ashtray, “cigarettes shows the life, the packets shows the
birth, God is showing by the lighter because he gives life to everything, and
ashtray represent death and grave (I want to spend the rest of my life
everywhere, with everyone, one to one, always, forever, now. 1997, p.102).
Damien Hirst, Party Time, 1995
Damien Hirst, Party Time, 1995
My comment is still the same as in the last post; in-text reference and bibliography. You made also no analysis in relation to the parameters of the brief.
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