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Wikipedia

Damien Hirst

Damien Steven Hirst (/hɜːrst/; né Brennan; born 7 June 1965) is an English artist, entrepreneur, and art collector.[1] He is one of the Young British Artists (YBAs) who dominated the art scene in the UK during the 1990s.[2][3] He is reportedly the United Kingdom's richest living artist, with his wealth estimated at US$384 million in the 2020 Sunday Times Rich List.[4][5][6] During the 1990s his career was closely linked with the collector Charles Saatchi, but increasing frictions came to a head in 2003 and the relationship ended.[7]

Damien Hirst
Hirst in a still from the movie The Future of Art
Born
Damien Steven Brennan

(1965-06-07) 7 June 1965 (age 57)
Bristol, England
Education
Known for
Notable work
MovementYoung British Artists
AwardsTurner Prize
Patron(s)Charles Saatchi
Websitedamienhirst.com
The Damien Hirst Room at Arken Museum of Modern Art, Denmark

Death is a central theme in Hirst's works.[8][9] He became famous for a series of artworks in which dead animals (including a shark, a sheep, and a cow) are preserved, sometimes having been dissected, in formaldehyde. The best-known of these was The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, a 14-foot (4.3 m) tiger shark immersed in formaldehyde in a clear display case. He has also made "spin paintings", created on a spinning circular surface, and "spot paintings", which are rows of randomly coloured circles created by his assistants.[citation needed]

In September 2008, Hirst made an unprecedented move for a living artist[10] by selling a complete show, Beautiful Inside My Head Forever, at Sotheby's by auction and bypassing his long-standing galleries.[11] The auction raised £111 million ($198 million), breaking the record for a one-artist auction[12] as well as Hirst's own record with £10.3 million for The Golden Calf, an animal with 18-carat gold horns and hooves, preserved in formaldehyde.[11]

Since 1999, Hirst's works have been challenged and contested as plagiarised 16 times. In one instance, after his sculpture Hymn was found to be closely based on a child's toy, legal proceedings led to an out-of-court settlement.[13]

Early life and training

Hirst was born Damien Steven Brennan in Bristol[14][15] and grew up in Leeds with his Irish mother who worked for the Citizens Advice Bureau. He never met his father; his mother married his stepfather when Hirst was two, and the couple divorced 10 years later. His stepfather was reportedly a motor mechanic.[16]

His mother stated that she lost control of her son when he was young, as he was notably arrested on two occasions for shoplifting.[16] Hirst sees her as someone who would not tolerate rebellion: she cut up his bondage trousers and heated one of his Sex Pistols vinyl records on the cooker to turn it into a fruit bowl[17] (or a plant pot).[18] He says, "If she didn't like how I was dressed, she would quickly take me away from the bus stop". She did, though, encourage his liking for drawing, which was his only successful educational subject.[17]

His art teacher at Allerton Grange School "pleaded"[17] for Hirst to be allowed to enter the sixth form,[17] where he took two A-levels, achieving an "E" grade in art.[16] He was refused admission to Jacob Kramer College when he first applied, but attended the art school after a subsequent successful application to the Foundation Diploma course.[16]

He went to an exhibition of work by Francis Davison, staged by Julian Spalding at the Hayward Gallery in 1983.[19] Davison created abstract collages from torn and cut coloured paper which, Hirst said, "blew me away", and which he modelled his own work on for the next two years.[19]

He worked for two years on London building sites, then studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths College (1986–89),[16] although again he was refused a place the first time he applied. In 2007, Hirst was quoted as saying of An Oak Tree by Goldsmiths' senior tutor, Michael Craig-Martin: "That piece is, I think, the greatest piece of conceptual sculpture. I still can't get it out of my head."[20] While a student, Hirst had a placement at a mortuary, an experience that influenced his later themes and materials.[21] While an art student, Hirst was an assistant at Anthony d'Offay's gallery.[22][23][24]

Early career—student and warehouse shows

In July 1988, in his second year at Goldsmiths College, Hirst was the main organiser of an independent student exhibition, Freeze, in a disused London Port Authority administrative block in London's Docklands. He gained sponsorship for this event from the London Docklands Development Corporation. The show was visited by Charles Saatchi, Norman Rosenthal and Nicholas Serota, thanks to the influence of his Goldsmiths lecturer Michael Craig-Martin. Hirst's own contribution to the show consisted of a cluster of cardboard boxes painted with household paint.[25] After graduating, Hirst was included in New Contemporaries show and in a group show at Kettle's Yard gallery in Cambridge. Seeking a gallery dealer, he first approached Karsten Schubert, but was turned down.

Hirst, along with his friend Carl Freedman and Billee Sellman, curated two enterprising "warehouse" shows in 1990, Modern Medicine and Gambler, in a Bermondsey former Peek Freans biscuit factory they designated "Building One".[26][27] Saatchi arrived at the second show in a green Rolls-Royce and, according to Freedman, stood open-mouthed with astonishment in front of (and then bought) Hirst's first major "animal" installation, A Thousand Years, consisting of a large glass case containing maggots and flies feeding on a rotting cow's head.[28] They also staged Michael Landy's Market.[27] At this time, Hirst said, "I can't wait to get into a position to make really bad art and get away with it. At the moment if I did certain things people would look at it, consider it and then say 'f off'. But after a while you can get away with things."[19]

Professional career

1987–1990

1987 – Damien Hirst and Holden Rowan, Old Court Gallery, Windsor Arts Centre, Windsor, UK – Curator Derek Culley[29]

1988 – Damien Hirst: Constructions and Sculpture, Old Court Gallery, Windsor, UK -Curator Derek Culley[29]

1988 – Freeze, Surrey Docks, London, UK[29]

1989 – New Contemporaries, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK[29]

1990 – Modern Medicine, Building One, London, UK[29]

1990 – Gambler, Building One, London, UK[29]

1990 – Building One, Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery, Paris, FR[29]

1991–1994

His first solo exhibition, organised by Tamara Chodzko – Dial, In and Out of Love, was held in an unused shop on Woodstock Street in central London in 1991;[30] already in 1989 he had been part of a group exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts,[31] and the Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery in Paris.[32] The Serpentine Gallery presented the first survey of the new generation of artists with the exhibition Broken English,[33] in part curated by Hirst.[34] In 1991 Hirst met the up-and-coming art dealer, Jay Jopling, who then represented him.[35]

In 1991, Charles Saatchi had offered to fund whatever artwork Hirst wanted to make, and the result was showcased in 1992 in the first Young British Artists exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in North London. Hirst's work was titled The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living and was a shark in formaldehyde in a vitrine, and sold for £50,000. The shark had been caught by a commissioned fisherman in Australia and had cost £6,000.[36] The exhibition also included In a Thousand Years. As a result of the show, Hirst was nominated for that year's Turner Prize, but it was awarded to Grenville Davey.

Hirst's first major international presentation was in the Venice Biennale in 1993 with the work, Mother and Child Divided, a cow and a calf cut into sections and exhibited in a series of separate vitrines. He curated the show Some Went Mad, Some Ran Away in 1994 at the Serpentine Gallery in London, where he exhibited Away from the Flock (a sheep in a tank of formaldehyde). On 9 May, Mark Bridger, a 35-year-old artist from Oxford, walked into the gallery and poured black ink into the tank, and retitled the work Black Sheep. He was subsequently prosecuted, at Hirst's wish, and was given two years' probation. The sculpture was restored at a cost of £1,000. When a photograph of Away from the Flock was reproduced in the 1997 book by Hirst I want to spend the rest of my life everywhere, with everyone, one-to-one, always, forever, now, the vandalism was referenced by allowing the tank to be obscured by pulling a card, reproducing the effect of ink being poured into the tank; this resulted in Hirst being sued by Bridger for violating his copyright on Black Sheep.[37]

1995–1999

In 1995, Hirst won the Turner Prize. New York public health officials banned Two Fucking and Two Watching featuring a rotting cow and bull, because of fears of "vomiting among the visitors". There were solo shows in Seoul, London and Salzburg. He directed the video for the song "Country House" for the band Blur. No Sense of Absolute Corruption, his first solo show in the Gagosian Gallery in New York was staged the following year. In London the short film, Hanging Around, was shown—written and directed by Hirst and starring Eddie Izzard. In 1997 the Sensation exhibition opened at the Royal Academy in London. A Thousand Years and other works by Hirst were included, but the main controversy occurred over other artists' works. It was nevertheless seen as the formal acceptance of the YBAs into the establishment.[38]

In 1997, his autobiography and art book, I Want To Spend the Rest of My Life Everywhere, with Everyone, One to One, Always, Forever, Now, was published. With Alex James of the band Blur and actor Keith Allen, he formed the band Fat Les, achieving a number 2 hit with a raucous football-themed song Vindaloo, followed up by Jerusalem with the London Gay Men's Chorus. Hirst also painted a simple colour pattern for the Beagle 2 probe. This pattern was to be used to calibrate the probe's cameras after it had landed on Mars. He turned down the British Council's invitation to be the UK's representative at the 1999 Venice Biennale because "it didn't feel right".[39] He threatened to sue British Airways claiming a breach of copyright over an advert design with coloured spots for its low budget airline, Go.[40]

2000–2004

In 2000, Hirst's sculpture Hymn (which Saatchi had bought for a reported £1m) was given pole position at the show Ant Noises (an anagram of "sensation") in the Saatchi Gallery. Hirst was then sued himself for breach of copyright over this sculpture (see Appropriation below).[41] Hirst sold three more copies of his sculpture for similar amounts to the first.[42] In September 2000, in New York, Larry Gagosian held the Hirst show, Damien Hirst: Models, Methods, Approaches, Assumptions, Results and Findings. 100,000 people visited the show in 12 weeks and all the work was sold.[43]

On 10 September 2002, on the eve of the first anniversary of the 9/11 World Trade Center attacks, Hirst said in an interview with BBC News Online:

The thing about 9/11 is that it's kind of like an artwork in its own right. It was wicked, but it was devised in this way for this kind of impact. It was devised visually... You've got to hand it to them on some level because they've achieved something which nobody would have ever have thought possible, especially to a country as big as America. So on one level they kind of need congratulating, which a lot of people shy away from, which is a very dangerous thing.[44]

The next week, following public outrage at his remarks, he issued a statement through his company, Science Ltd:

I apologise unreservedly for any upset I have caused, particularly to the families of the victims of the events on that terrible day.[45]

In 2002, Hirst gave up smoking and drinking after his wife Maia had complained and "had to move out because I was so horrible". He had met Joe Strummer (former lead singer of The Clash) at Glastonbury in 1995, becoming good friends and going on annual family holidays with him. Just before Christmas 2002, Strummer died of a heart attack. This had a profound effect on Hirst, who said, "It was the first time I felt mortal". He subsequently devoted a lot of time to founding a charity, Strummerville, to help young musicians.[17]

In April 2003, the Saatchi Gallery opened at new premises in County Hall, London, with a show that included a Hirst retrospective. This brought a developing strain in his relationship with Saatchi to a head[7] (one source of contention had been who was most responsible for boosting their mutual profile). Hirst disassociated himself from the retrospective to the extent of not including it in his CV.[7] He was angry that a Mini car that he had decorated for charity with his trademark spots was being exhibited as a serious artwork.[7] The show also scuppered a prospective Hirst retrospective at Tate Modern.[7] He said Saatchi was "childish"[17] and "I'm not Charles Saatchi's barrel-organ monkey ... He only recognises art with his wallet ... he believes he can affect art values with buying power, and he still believes he can do it."[7]

In September 2003, he had an exhibition Romance in the Age of Uncertainty at Jay Jopling's White Cube gallery in London, which made him a reported £11m,[17] bringing his wealth to over £35m. It was reported that a sculpture, Charity, had been sold for £1.5m to a Korean, Kim Chang-Il, who intended to exhibit it in his department store's gallery in Seoul.[46] The 22-foot (6.7m), 6-ton sculpture was based on the 1960s Spastic Society's model, which is of a girl in leg irons holding a collecting box. In Hirst's version the collecting box is shown broken open and is empty.

Charity was exhibited in the centre of Hoxton Square, in front of White Cube. Inside the gallery downstairs were 12 vitrines representing Jesus's disciples, each case containing mostly gruesome, often blood-stained, items relevant to the particular disciple. At the end was an empty vitrine, representing Christ. Upstairs were four small glass cases, each containing a cow's head stuck with scissors and knives. It has been described as an "extraordinarily spiritual experience" in the tradition of Catholic imagery.[47] At this time Hirst bought back 12 works from Saatchi (a third of Saatchi's holdings of Hirst's early works), through Jay Jopling, reportedly for more than £8 million. Hirst had sold these pieces to Saatchi in the early 1990s for rather less, his first installations costing under £10,000.[7]

On 24 May 2004, a fire in the Momart storage warehouse destroyed many works from the Saatchi collection, including 17 of Hirst's, although the sculpture Charity survived, as it was outside in the builder's yard. That July, Hirst said of Saatchi, "I respect Charles. There's not really a feud. If I see him, we speak, but we were never really drinking buddies."[17]

Hirst designed a cover image for the Band Aid 20 charity single featuring the "Grim Reaper" in late 2004, and image showing an African child perched on his knee.[48] This design was not to the liking of the record company executives,[who?] and was replaced by reindeer in the snow standing next to a child.[49]

In December 2004, The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living was sold by Saatchi to American collector Steve Cohen, for $8 million, in a deal negotiated by Hirst's New York agent, Gagosian.[50] Cohen, a Greenwich hedge fund manager, then donated the work to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Sir Nicholas Serota had wanted to acquire it for the Tate Gallery, and Hugo Swire, Shadow Minister for the Arts, tabled a question to ask if the government would ensure it stayed in the country.[51]

2005–2009

Hirst exhibited 30 paintings at the Gagosian Gallery in New York in March 2005. These had taken 3½ years to complete. They were closely based on photos, mostly by assistants (who were rotated between paintings) but with a final finish by Hirst.[52] Also in 2005, Hirst founded the art book publisher Other Criteria.[53]

In February 2006, he opened a major show in Mexico, at the Hilario Galguera Gallery, called The Death of God, Towards a Better Understanding of Life without God aboard The Ship of Fools, an exhibition that attracted considerable media coverage as Hirst's first show in Latin America.[54] In June that year, he exhibited alongside the work of Francis Bacon (Triptychs) at the Gagosian Gallery, Britannia Street, London, an exhibition that included the vitrine, A Thousand Years (1990), and four triptychs: paintings, medicine cabinets and a new formaldehyde work entitled The Tranquility of Solitude (For George Dyer), influenced by Bacon.[55]

 
For the Love of God by Damien Hirst (2007)

A Thousand Years (1990)[56] contains an actual life cycle. Maggots hatch inside a white minimal box, turn into flies, then feed on a bloody, severed cow's head on the floor of a claustrophobic glass vitrine. Above, hatched flies buzz around in the closed space. Many meet a violent end in an insect-o-cutor; others survive to continue the cycle.[57] A Thousand Years was admired by Bacon, who in a letter to a friend a month before he died, wrote about the experience of seeing the work at the Saatchi Gallery in London.[58] Margarita Coppack notes that "It is as if Bacon, a painter with no direct heir in that medium, was handing the baton on to a new generation."[59] Hirst has openly acknowledged his debt to Bacon,[60] absorbing the painter's visceral images and obsessions early on and giving them concrete existence in sculptural form with works like A Thousand Years.[61]

Hirst gained the world record for the most expensive work of art by a living artist—his Lullaby Spring in June 2007,[62] when a 3-metre-wide steel cabinet with 6,136 pills sold for 19.2 million dollars to Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, the Emir of Qatar.[62]

In June 2007, Beyond Belief, an exhibition of Hirst's new work, opened at the White Cube gallery in London. The centre-piece, a Memento Mori titled For the Love of God, was a human skull recreated in platinum and adorned with 8,601 diamonds weighing a total of 1,106.18 carats.[63] Approximately £15,000,000 worth of diamonds were used. It was modelled on an 18th-century skull, but the only surviving human part of the original is the teeth. The asking price for For the Love of God was £50,000,000 ($100 million or 75 million euros). It didn't sell outright,[64] and on 30 August 2008 was sold to a consortium that included Hirst himself and his gallery White Cube.[64]

In November 2008, the skull was exhibited at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam next to an exhibition of paintings from the museum collection selected by Hirst. Wim Pijbes, the museum director, said of the exhibition, "It boosts our image. Of course, we do the Old Masters but we are not a 'yesterday institution'. It's for now. And Damien Hirst shows this in a very strong way."[65]

In December 2008, Hirst contacted the Design and Artists Copyright Society (DACS) demanding action be taken over works containing images of his skull sculpture For the Love of God made by a 16-year-old graffiti artist, Cartrain, and sold on the internet gallery 100artworks.com. On the advice of his gallery, Cartrain handed over the artworks to DACS and forfeited the £200 he had made; he said, "I met Christian Zimmermann [from DACS] who told me Hirst personally ordered action on the matter."[66] In June 2009, copyright lawyer Paul Tackaberry compared the two images and said, "This is fairly non-contentious legally. Ask yourself, what portion of the original–and not just the quantity but also the quality–appears in the new work? If a 'substantial portion' of the 'original' appears in the new work, then that's all you need for copyright infringement... Quantitatively about 80% of the skull is in the second image."[67]

In April – September 2009, the exhibition Requiem took place in the Victor Pinchuk art centre that was instrumental in military invasion on NATO in Ukraine and provided root for financing The Maidan.e

In October 2009, Hirst revealed that he had been painting with his own hand in a style influenced by Francis Bacon for several years. His show of these paintings, No Love Lost, was at the Wallace Collection in London.[68]

2010–2014

In 2011, Damien Hirst designed the cover of the Red Hot Chili Peppers album I'm with You.[69]

Hirst's representation of the British Union Flag formed the arena centrepiece for the 2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in London.[70] In January 2013, Hirst became the third British artist to design the Brit Awards statue using his signature NEO-Pop art style inspired by his 2000 LSD "spot painting."[71] In October 2014, Hirst exhibited big scale capsules, pills and medicines at the Paul Stolper Gallery titled: 'Schizophrenogenesis'.[72][73]

2015–present

In April 2016, a study published in Analytical Methods claimed Hirst's preserved carcasses leaked formaldehyde gas above legal limits at Tate Modern; however, this study was shown to be flawed.[74]

In 2017, he organised with Pinault Foundation a solo exhibition, in Venice contemporarily to the Biennale in two places in the city: Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana. The title is Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable, purporting to present ancient treasures from a sunken Greek ship, with pieces that range from Ancient Egyptian-alike items to Disney character reproductions, encrusted with shells and corals.[75]

In July 2021 through January 2022, Hirst's series Cherry Blossoms was exhibited at the Foundation Cartier in Paris.[76] The exhibition was then moved to the National Art Center in Tokyo in 2022. The show marked Hirst's first major solo exhibition in Japan.[77]

The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living

This artwork features a large tiger shark suspended in formaldehyde. The tank in which the shark is floating creates the illusion of the animal being cut into three pieces due to the container looking like three separate sections. The work was created in 1991, and since then, the formaldehyde preserving the shark has slowly eaten away at the animal's body, which shows signs of decay.[78] Hirst says that the formaldehyde surrounding the shark is the process of death and decay.[50]

Some critics argue that the minimalistic qualities of the work, coinciding with the 'stereotypical' death theme, are too bland for such a prestigious artist. One critic wrote, "But the famous shark, shackled to its coffeebar-existentialist title – The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living – seems ever more dilapidated, more fairground sideshow, with every dowdy showing. What clichéd menace it may once have theoretically possessed has evaporated."[79] Another art critic, Luke White, disagrees, saying that others had earlier perceived sharks "...as ugly and dangerous, but by the end of the century, they found them instead exhilarating, fascinating, and sublime." White argues that sharks have been seen as transcendent, awe-inspiring creatures throughout centuries, a creature that is the embodiment of sublimitude[clarification needed] as well as a metaphorical representation of our mind helps,[clarification needed] relaying the importance of how special our thoughts really are.[verification needed][80]

Beautiful Inside My Head Forever

Beautiful Inside My Head Forever was a two-day auction of Hirst's new work at Sotheby's, London, taking place on 15 and 16 September 2008.[11] It was unusual as he bypassed galleries and sold directly to the public.[81] Writing in The Independent, Cahal Milmo said that the idea of the auction was conceived by Hirst's business advisor of 13 years, Frank Dunphy, who had to overcome Hirst's initial reluctance about the idea.[82] Hirst eventually defended the concept and refuted the accusation that he was only interested in making money.

People always worry that money somehow tarnishes art, but I always thought it was disgusting that people like Van Gogh never made any money. It's important to make sure that the art takes precedence over the money. Most people worry that somehow you lose your integrity. Frank said to me a long time ago: "Always have to make sure that you use the money to chase the art and not the art to chase the money." And I think that's true; you have to look at that very carefully.[83]

The sale raised £111 million ($198 million) for 218 items.[12] The auction exceeded expectations,[12] and was ten times higher than the existing Sotheby's record for a single artist sale,[84] occurring as the financial markets plunged.[84] The Sunday Times said that Hirst's business colleagues had "propped up"[84] the sale prices, making purchases or bids which totalled over half of the £70.5 million spent on the first sale day:[84] Harry Blain of the Haunch of Venison gallery said that bids were entered on behalf of clients wishing to acquire the work.[84]

Hirst art collecting

In November 2006, Hirst was curator of In the darkest hour there may be light, shown at the Serpentine Gallery, London, the first public exhibition of (a small part of) his own collection.[85] Now known as the 'murderme collection', this significant accumulation of works spans several generations of international artists, from well-known figures such as Francis Bacon, Jeff Koons, Tracey Emin, Richard Prince, Banksy and Andy Warhol, to British painters such as John Bellany, John Hoyland, and Gary Hume,[86] and artists in earlier stages of their careers Rachel Howard,[87] David Choe, Ross Minoru Laing, Nicholas Lumb, Tom Ormond, and Dan Baldwin.[88]

Hirst is currently restoring the Grade I listed Toddington Manor, near Cheltenham, where he intends to eventually house the complete collection.[89] In 2007, Hirst donated the 1991 sculptures "The Acquired Inability to Escape" and "Life Without You" and the 2002 work "Who is Afraid of the Dark?" (fly painting), and an exhibition copy from 2007 of "Mother and Child Divided" to Tate from his own personal collection of works.[90]

In 2010, Hirst was among the unsuccessful bidders to take over the Magazine Building, a 19th-century structure in Kensington Gardens, which reopened in 2013 as the Serpentine Sackler Gallery after its conversion by Zaha Hadid.[91] In March 2012, he outlined his plans to open a gallery in Vauxhall, London specifically designed to exhibit his personal collection, which includes five pieces by Francis Bacon. The Newport Street Gallery opened in October 2015. It is located in a former theater carpentry and scenery production workshops redesigned by Peter St John and Adam Caruso, and runs the length of Newport Street in Vauxhall.[92][91]

Awards and recognition

Hirst was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1992, for his first Young British Artists exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in North London, which included his The Physical Impossibility of Death..., with the award going to Grenville Davey that year.[93]

Hirst won the Turner Prize in 1995.[94] He was asked to represent the UK in the Venice Biennale in 1999 or to become a Royal Academian but refused.[95]

In 2012, Hirst was among the British cultural icons selected by artist Sir Peter Blake to appear in a new version of his album cover for the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, to celebrate the British cultural figures of his life that he most admires.[96]

Critical responses

Positive

Hirst has been praised in recognition of his celebrity and the way this has galvanised interest in the arts, raising the profile of British art and helping to (re)create the image of "Cool Britannia." In the mid-1990s, the then-Heritage Secretary, Virginia Bottomley recognised him as "a pioneer of the British art movement", and even sheep farmers were pleased he had raised increased interest in British lamb.[97] Janet Street-Porter praised his originality, which had brought art to new audiences and was the "art-world equivalent of the Oasis concerts at Earl's Court".[97]

Andres Serrano is also known for shocking work and understands that contemporary fame does not necessarily equate to lasting fame, but backs Hirst: "Damien is very clever ... First you get the attention ... Whether or not it will stand the test of time, I don't know, but I think it will."[97] Sir Nicholas Serota commented, "Damien is something of a showman ... It is very difficult to be an artist when there is huge public and media attention. Because Damien Hirst has been built up as a very important figure, there are plenty of sceptics ready to put the knife in."[97]

Tracey Emin said: "There is no comparison between him and me; he developed a whole new way of making art and he's clearly in a league of his own. It would be like making comparisons with Warhol."[98] Despite Hirst's insults to him, Saatchi remains a staunch supporter, labelling Hirst a genius,[97] and stating:

General art books dated 2105 will be as brutal about editing the late 20th century as they are about almost all other centuries. Every artist other than Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol, Donald Judd and Damien Hirst will be a footnote.[99]

Hirst was among the names in Blake Gopnik's 2011 list "The 10 Most Important Artists of Today", with Gopnik interpreting Hirst's career as "a metaphor for how consumption has become our guiding force".[100]

Negative

There has been equally vehement opposition to Hirst's work. Of Hirst's work, the former Evening Standard art critic, Brian Sewell, expressed the following: "I don't think of it as art ... It is no more interesting than a stuffed pike over a pub door. Indeed there may well be more art in a stuffed pike than a dead sheep."[101]

The Stuckist art group was founded in 1999 with a specific anti-Britart agenda by Charles Thomson and Billy Childish;[102] Hirst is one of their main targets. They wrote (referring to a Channel 4 programme on Hirst):

The fact that Hirst's work does mirror society is not its strength but its weakness – and the reason it is guaranteed to decline artistically (and financially) as current social modes become outmoded. What Hirst has insightfully observed of his spin-paintings in Life and Death and Damien Hirst is the only comment that needs to be made of his entire oeuvre: "They're bright and they're zany – but there's fuck all there at the end of the day."[101]

 
A Dead Shark Isn't Art, Stuckism International Gallery 2003[103]

In 2003, under the title A Dead Shark Isn't Art, the Stuckism International Gallery exhibited a shark which had first been put on public display two years before Hirst's by Eddie Saunders in his Shoreditch shop, JD Electrical Supplies. Thomson asked, "If Hirst's shark is recognised as great art, then how come Eddie's, which was on exhibition for two years beforehand, isn't? Do we perhaps have here an undiscovered artist of genius, who got there first, or is it that a dead shark isn't art at all?"[103] The Stuckists suggested that Hirst may have got the idea for his work from Saunders' shop display.[104]

In a 2008 Channel 4 documentary called The Mona Lisa Curse, art critic Robert Hughes claimed that Hirst's work was "tacky" and "absurd". Hughes said it was "a little miracle" that the value of £5 million was put on Hirst's Virgin Mother (a 35-foot bronze statue), which was made by someone "with so little facility".[105] Hughes called Hirst's shark in formaldehyde "the world's most over-rated marine organism" and attacked the artist for "functioning like a commercial brand", making the case that Hirst and his work proved that financial value was now the only meaning that remained for art.[105]

Hirst's 2009 show, No Love Lost, of paintings by his own hand, at the Wallace Collection in London, received "one of the most unanimously negative responses to any exhibition in living memory".[68] Tom Lubbock of The Independent called Hirst's work derivative, weak and boring:[106] "Hirst, as a painter, is at about the level of a not-very-promising, first-year art student."[106] Rachel Campbell-Johnston of The Times said it was "shockingly bad".[106] A 2012 exhibition of paintings by Hirst at the White Cube gallery in Bermondsey, entitled "Two Weeks One Summer", provoked in The Guardian the comment that Hirst "can kid himself he is an Old Master and have the art world go along with the fantasy".[107]

Julian Spalding, British art critic and author of the book Con Art – Why You Should Sell Your Damien Hirsts While You Can,[108] has said,

It's often been proposed, seriously, that Damien Hirst is a greater artist than Michelangelo because he had the idea for a shark in a tank whereas Michelangelo didn't have the idea for his David … [but] The emperor has nothing on. When the penny drops that these are not art, it's all going to collapse. Hirst should not be in the Tate. He's not an artist. What separates Michelangelo from Hirst is that Michelangelo was an artist and Hirst isn't.[109][110]

Hirst's 2012 retrospective at the Tate Gallery, while setting records for attendance, also received many complaints. "Members of the public wrote to the state-funded gallery accusing it of wasting taxpayers' money by showcasing art that was 'repetitive', 'meaningless' and 'almost universally awful'."[111]

Hirst's work has also been a frequent subject of criticism in the tabloid press. A Daily Mail headline read: "For 1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all." Norman Tebbit, commenting on the Sensation exhibition, wrote "Have they gone stark raving mad? The works of the 'artist' are lumps of dead animals. There are thousands of young artists who didn't get a look in, presumably because their work was too attractive to sane people. Modern art experts never learn."[101]

Appropriation and plagiarism claims

In 1999, chef Marco Pierre White said Hirst's Butterflies on Mars had plagiarised his own work, Rising Sun, which he then put on display in the restaurant Quo Vadis in place of Hirst's work.[112]

 
Spiritus Callidus #2 by John Lekay, 1993, crystal skull

In 2000, Hirst was sued for breach of copyright over his sculpture, Hymn, which was a 20-foot (6.1 m), six ton, enlargement of his son Connor's 14" Young Scientist Anatomy Set, designed by Norman Emms, 10,000 of which are sold a year by Hull-based toy manufacturer Humbrol for £14.99 each.[41] Hirst paid an undisclosed sum to two charities, Children Nationwide and the Toy Trust, in an out-of-court settlement,[41] as well as a "good will payment" to Emms.[112] The charitable donation was less than Emms had hoped for. Hirst also agreed to restrictions on further reproductions of his sculpture.[41]

In 2006, a graphic artist and former research associate at the Royal College of Art, Robert Dixon, author of 'Mathographics', alleged that Hirst's print Valium had "unmistakable similarities" to one of his own designs. Hirst's manager contested this by explaining the origin of Hirst's piece was from a book The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry (1991)—not realising this was one place where Dixon's design had been published.[112][113]

In 2007, artist John LeKay, a friend of Damien Hirst between 1992 and 1994, was reported by Dalya Alberge of The Times to have provided ideas and inspirations for a variety of his later works, including having given him a "marked-up duplicate copy" of a Carolina Biological Supply Company catalogue that LeKay had been using as inspiration and supply for his work, noting that "You have no idea how much he got from this catalogue. The Cow Divided is on page 647—it is a model of a cow divided down the centre, like his piece", a reference to Hirst's work Mother and Child, Divided, a cow and calf cut in half and placed in formaldehyde.[113] LeKay also suggests that Hirst copied the idea of For the Love of God from his work on crystal skulls in 1993, saying, "I would like Damien to acknowledge that 'John really did inspire the skull and influenced my work a lot.'"[113] Copyright lawyer Paul Tackaberry reviewed images of LeKay's and Hirst's work and saw no basis for any appropriation rising to the legal level of a copyright infringement.[67]

In 2010, in 3:AM Magazine and in The Jackdaw, Charles Thomson argued that there are 15 cases where Hirst plagiarised the work of others, including his enlarged version of an anatomical torso model, Hymn (1999) which Thomson presents alongside a comparable John LeKay's anatomical torso model from Carolina Science, Yin and Yang (1990), and Hirst's In Nomine Patris [In the Name of the Father] (2005), which presents a split-open crucified sheep in a tank of formaldehyde, after John LeKay's comparably posed split-open crucified sheep, entitled This is My Body, This is My Blood (1987) mounted on a wooden board.[114][115][116][117] Other examples cited were the similarity of Hirst's cabinets with shelves and bottles, e.g., My Way (1991), which expanded to become his room-size installation, Pharmacy (1992), which Thomson relates to a Joseph Cornell display of cabinet with shelves and bottles, Pharmacy (1943); and Hirst's appropriation of concept from Lori Precious, who had made stained-glass window effects from butterfly wings from 1994, a number of years before Hirst. The art gallery lemon sky: projects + editions exhibited a selection of these works by Precious at the Year 06 Contemporary Art Fair in London in October 2006, where these pieces were viewed by a large audience and would have been seen at that time, to have credibly been plagiarized.[114][116][117] Thomson also suggested that Hirst's spin paintings and installation of a ball on a jet of air were not original, since similar pieces had been made in the 1960s.[114][116][117][118] A spokesperson for Hirst said the article was "poor journalism" and that Hirst would be making a "comprehensive" rebuttal of the claims.[119]

In May 2017 Hirst was accused of copying and appropriating Yoruba art from Ilé-Ifẹ̀ in his work Golden Heads (Female), which is on display in his exhibition "Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable" at the Venice Biennale.[120][121][122] The work, said critics, was not given appropriate context for viewers.[122]

Commenting on his collection, Hirst has said "As a human being, as you go through life, you just do collect. It was that sort of entropic collecting that I found myself interested in, just amassing stuff while you're alive."[123]

In 2022 artist and writer Joe Machine accused Hirst of plagiarism of his cherry blossom paintings, the 16th accusation of plagiarism against Hirst.[124]

Hirst business ventures

Work philosophy

Although Hirst participated physically in the making of early works,[125] he has always needed assistants—for instance, Carl Freedman helped with the first vitrines[126]—and the current volume of work produced necessitates a "factory" setup.[127] this has led to questions about authenticity, as was highlighted in 1997, when a spin painting that Hirst said was a "forgery" appeared at sale,[citation needed] although he had previously said that he often had nothing to do with the creation of these pieces.[citation needed]

Hirst said that he only painted five spot paintings himself because, "I couldn't be fucking arsed doing it"; he described his efforts as "shite"—"They're shit compared to ... the best person who ever painted spots for me was Rachel. She's brilliant. Absolutely fucking brilliant. The best spot painting you can have by me is one painted by Rachel." He also describes another painting assistant who was leaving and asked for one of the paintings. Hirst told her to, "'make one of your own.' And she said, 'No, I want one of yours.' But the only difference, between one painted by her and one of mine, is the money.'"[128] By February 1999, two assistants had painted 300 spot paintings. Hirst sees the real creative act as being the conception, not the execution, and that, as the progenitor of the idea, he is therefore the artist:

Art goes on in your head... If you said something interesting, that might be a title for a work of art and I'd write it down. Art comes from everywhere. It's your response to your surroundings. There are on-going ideas I've been working out for years, like how to make a rainbow in a gallery. I've always got a massive list of titles, of ideas for shows, and of works without titles.[17]

Hirst is also known to volunteer repair work on his projects after a client has made a purchase. For example, this service was offered in the case of the suspended shark purchased by Steven A. Cohen.[129][130][131]

Restaurant ventures

Hirst had a short-lived partnership with chef Marco Pierre White in the restaurant "Quo Vadis". His best-known restaurant involvement was Pharmacy, located in Notting Hill, London, which closed in 2004. Although one of the owners, Hirst had only leased his art work to the restaurant, so he was able to retrieve and sell it at a Sotheby's auction, earning over £11 million. Some of the work had been adapted, e.g. by signing it prior to the auction.[132]

Hirst is a co-owner of the seafood restaurant, 11 The Quay, in the English seaside town of Ilfracombe.[133] In 2016, Damien Hirst designed the interiors of his new restaurant Pharmacy 2 at the Newport Street Gallery in Vauxhall, London.[134]

Net worth

Art by Hirst sold at his auction in 2008, Beautiful Inside My Head Forever, raised US$198 million It is said to be the largest amount raised by any living artist to date.[135] Hirst is reputed to be the richest living artist to date.[6] In 2009, the annually collated chart of the wealthiest individuals in Britain and Ireland, Sunday Times Rich List, placed Hirst at joint number 238 with a net worth of £235m.[136] Hirst's wealth was valued at £215m in the 2010 Sunday Times Rich List, making him Britain's wealthiest artist.[5][137]

Works published, shown, sold

Written

  • Hirst, Damien (2014). The Complete Spot Paintings. New York, NY: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-1906967482. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  • —— (2013). ABC. New York, NY: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-1906967635. Retrieved 22 February 2017.

Art

His works include:

  • Pharmacy (1992), a life-size recreation of a chemist's shop.[138]
  • Away from the Flock (1994), composed of a dead sheep in a glass tank of formaldehyde.[139]
  • Beautiful Axe, Slash, Gosh Painting (1999) Signed on the reverse. Gloss household paint on canvas.[140]
  • The Virgin Mother, a massive sculpture depicting a pregnant female human, with layers removed from one side to expose the fœtus, muscle and tissue layers, and skull underneath. This work was purchased by real estate magnate Aby Rosen for display on the plaza of one of his properties, the Lever House, in New York City.[141]
  • Painting-By-Numbers (2001), a do-it-yourself painting kit comprising a stamped canvas, brushes, and 90 paint tins in plexiglass designed to make a 'dot' painting.[142] Part of the exhibition was binned by a gallery cleaner who mistook it for trash.[143]
  • The Dream, (2008). a simulated unicorn in a tank of formaldehyde solution.[144]
  • Spin Drawing for Women's Equality (2016), auctioned as a fundraiser for the Women's Equality Party.[145]
  • Butterfly Rainbow (2020)[146]

Personal life

Between 1992 and 2012, Hirst lived with his American girlfriend, Maia Norman, with whom he has three sons, born 1995, 2000 and 2005.[147][better source needed]

Since becoming a father, Hirst has spent most of his time at his remote farmhouse near Combe Martin in Devon. Hirst and Norman were never married,[148] although Hirst had referred to Norman as his "common-law wife".[149]

Hirst has admitted serious drug and alcohol problems during a ten-year period from the early 1990s: "I started taking cocaine and drink... I turned into a babbling fucking wreck."[128] During this time he was known for his wild behaviour and eccentric acts including, for example, putting a cigarette in the end of his penis in front of journalists.[150]

He is a friend of Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood and 7-time World Snooker Champion Ronnie O'Sullivan.[151]

Charitable work

Hirst is a supporter of the indigenous rights organisation, Survival International.[152] In September 2008, Hirst donated the work, Beautiful Love Survival, at the Sotheby's London sale, Beautiful Inside My Head Forever, to raise money for this organisation.[153][154] Later, he also contributed his writing to the book, We Are One: A Celebration of Tribal Peoples, released in October 2009, in support of Survival. The book explores the existence of, and threats to, indigenous cultures around the world.[155][156]

In 2016 he donated artworks for the secret auction of Art on a Postcard,[157] a charity supporting the fight against Hepatitis C.[158]

NFTs

In July 2021 Hirst announced his first NFT project, named "The Currency": it consisted of 10,000 unique hand-painted dot-covered works on paper, each one corresponding to a non-fungible token. Two months later, the project revenued a total of $25,000,000.[159] Hirst instructed those who bought pieces from his latest collection to choose either the physical artwork or the NFT representing it. Buyers were informed that corresponding artworks for the non-exchanged NFTs would be destroyed, with the first 1,000 artworks being burned on October 11, 2022. He streamed the burning of his physical pieces on Instagram live from his London gallery and is set to burn thousands more of his artwork to complete the transformation of the selected artworks so they can exist solely as NFTs.[160] It has been estimated the works being burned are collectively worth almost £10 million.[161]

See also

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  150. ^ Leith, William. "Avoiding the Sharks", Life: The Observer Magazine, p. 15, 14 February 1999.
  151. ^ "Ronnie Wood taken to rehab by Damien Hirst". The Independent. 7 September 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  152. ^ . Rightlivelihood.org. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  153. ^ "Damien Hirst donates 'Beautiful Love Survival'". Survival International. 15 September 2008. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  154. ^ "Sotheby's Auctions – Calendar – Damien Hirst – Beautiful Inside My Head Forever (Evening Sale)". Sotheby's. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  155. ^ "'We Are One: a celebration of tribal peoples' published this autumn". Survival International. 16 October 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  156. ^ "We Are One". Survival International. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  157. ^ Art on a Postcard
  158. ^ Object, object. "You could potentially acquire a postcard-sized artwork by a famous artist at this secret auction in London". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  159. ^ "Damien Hirst's NFT Initiative, Which Asks Buyers to Choose Between a Digital Token and IRL Art, Has Already Generated $25 Million". news.artnet.com. 25 August 2021.
  160. ^ Halisia Hubbard (12 October 2022). "Damien Hirst just burned 1,000 of his paintings and will soon burn thousands more". NPR.
  161. ^ Steven McIntosh (11 October 2022). "Damien Hirst burns his own art after selling NFTs". BBC.

Further reading

  • Blanché, Ulrich (2018). Damien Hirst. Gallery Art in a Material World. Baden-Baden, DEU: Tectum Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8288-4030-0.
  • Pogrebin, Robin (21 February 2017). "Damien Hirst Alienated Collectors. Will His New Work Win Them Back?". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  • Blanché, Ulrich (2014). Konsumkunst: Kultur und Kommerz bei Banksy und Damien Hirst (in German). Bielefeld, DEU: transcript Verlag. ISBN 978-3839421390. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  • Thompson, Don (2012). The $12 Million Stuffed Shark: The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0230341937. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  • Benhamou-Huet, Judith (2012). Les artistes ont toujours aimé l'argent: De Dürer à Damien Hirst (in French). Paris, FRA: Grasset. ISBN 978-2246800002. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  • Tomkins, Calvin (2010). Lives of the Artists: Portraits of Ten Artists Whose Work and Lifestyles Embody the Future of Contemporary Art. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co. ISBN 978-1429946414. Retrieved 22 February 2017.

External links

  • Official Damien Hirst Website 20 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Damien Hirst's Pharmacy on Tate interactive site
  • Damien Hirst. Retrospective at Tate Modern, London / UK, Video Damien Hirst. Retrospective at Tate Modern, London, 2012

damien, hirst, damien, steven, hirst, ɜːr, brennan, born, june, 1965, english, artist, entrepreneur, collector, young, british, artists, ybas, dominated, scene, during, 1990s, reportedly, united, kingdom, richest, living, artist, with, wealth, estimated, milli. Damien Steven Hirst h ɜːr s t ne Brennan born 7 June 1965 is an English artist entrepreneur and art collector 1 He is one of the Young British Artists YBAs who dominated the art scene in the UK during the 1990s 2 3 He is reportedly the United Kingdom s richest living artist with his wealth estimated at US 384 million in the 2020 Sunday Times Rich List 4 5 6 During the 1990s his career was closely linked with the collector Charles Saatchi but increasing frictions came to a head in 2003 and the relationship ended 7 Damien HirstHirst in a still from the movie The Future of ArtBornDamien Steven Brennan 1965 06 07 7 June 1965 age 57 Bristol EnglandEducationJacob Kramer College Goldsmiths CollegeKnown forDiversity installation art painting sculptureNotable workThe Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living For the Love of God VerityMovementYoung British ArtistsAwardsTurner PrizePatron s Charles SaatchiDamien Hirst s voice source source source Recorded May 2013 from the BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island DiscsWebsitedamienhirst wbr comThe Damien Hirst Room at Arken Museum of Modern Art Denmark Death is a central theme in Hirst s works 8 9 He became famous for a series of artworks in which dead animals including a shark a sheep and a cow are preserved sometimes having been dissected in formaldehyde The best known of these was The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living a 14 foot 4 3 m tiger shark immersed in formaldehyde in a clear display case He has also made spin paintings created on a spinning circular surface and spot paintings which are rows of randomly coloured circles created by his assistants citation needed In September 2008 Hirst made an unprecedented move for a living artist 10 by selling a complete show Beautiful Inside My Head Forever at Sotheby s by auction and bypassing his long standing galleries 11 The auction raised 111 million 198 million breaking the record for a one artist auction 12 as well as Hirst s own record with 10 3 million for The Golden Calf an animal with 18 carat gold horns and hooves preserved in formaldehyde 11 Since 1999 Hirst s works have been challenged and contested as plagiarised 16 times In one instance after his sculpture Hymn was found to be closely based on a child s toy legal proceedings led to an out of court settlement 13 Contents 1 Early life and training 2 Early career student and warehouse shows 3 Professional career 3 1 1987 1990 3 2 1991 1994 3 3 1995 1999 3 4 2000 2004 3 5 2005 2009 3 6 2010 2014 3 7 2015 present 3 8 The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living 3 9 Beautiful Inside My Head Forever 4 Hirst art collecting 5 Awards and recognition 6 Critical responses 6 1 Positive 6 2 Negative 7 Appropriation and plagiarism claims 8 Hirst business ventures 8 1 Work philosophy 8 2 Restaurant ventures 8 3 Net worth 9 Works published shown sold 9 1 Written 9 2 Art 10 Personal life 10 1 Charitable work 11 NFTs 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and training EditHirst was born Damien Steven Brennan in Bristol 14 15 and grew up in Leeds with his Irish mother who worked for the Citizens Advice Bureau He never met his father his mother married his stepfather when Hirst was two and the couple divorced 10 years later His stepfather was reportedly a motor mechanic 16 His mother stated that she lost control of her son when he was young as he was notably arrested on two occasions for shoplifting 16 Hirst sees her as someone who would not tolerate rebellion she cut up his bondage trousers and heated one of his Sex Pistols vinyl records on the cooker to turn it into a fruit bowl 17 or a plant pot 18 He says If she didn t like how I was dressed she would quickly take me away from the bus stop She did though encourage his liking for drawing which was his only successful educational subject 17 His art teacher at Allerton Grange School pleaded 17 for Hirst to be allowed to enter the sixth form 17 where he took two A levels achieving an E grade in art 16 He was refused admission to Jacob Kramer College when he first applied but attended the art school after a subsequent successful application to the Foundation Diploma course 16 He went to an exhibition of work by Francis Davison staged by Julian Spalding at the Hayward Gallery in 1983 19 Davison created abstract collages from torn and cut coloured paper which Hirst said blew me away and which he modelled his own work on for the next two years 19 He worked for two years on London building sites then studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths College 1986 89 16 although again he was refused a place the first time he applied In 2007 Hirst was quoted as saying of An Oak Tree by Goldsmiths senior tutor Michael Craig Martin That piece is I think the greatest piece of conceptual sculpture I still can t get it out of my head 20 While a student Hirst had a placement at a mortuary an experience that influenced his later themes and materials 21 While an art student Hirst was an assistant at Anthony d Offay s gallery 22 23 24 Early career student and warehouse shows EditMain article Freeze art exhibition In July 1988 in his second year at Goldsmiths College Hirst was the main organiser of an independent student exhibition Freeze in a disused London Port Authority administrative block in London s Docklands He gained sponsorship for this event from the London Docklands Development Corporation The show was visited by Charles Saatchi Norman Rosenthal and Nicholas Serota thanks to the influence of his Goldsmiths lecturer Michael Craig Martin Hirst s own contribution to the show consisted of a cluster of cardboard boxes painted with household paint 25 After graduating Hirst was included in New Contemporaries show and in a group show at Kettle s Yard gallery in Cambridge Seeking a gallery dealer he first approached Karsten Schubert but was turned down Hirst along with his friend Carl Freedman and Billee Sellman curated two enterprising warehouse shows in 1990 Modern Medicine and Gambler in a Bermondsey former Peek Freans biscuit factory they designated Building One 26 27 Saatchi arrived at the second show in a green Rolls Royce and according to Freedman stood open mouthed with astonishment in front of and then bought Hirst s first major animal installation A Thousand Years consisting of a large glass case containing maggots and flies feeding on a rotting cow s head 28 They also staged Michael Landy s Market 27 At this time Hirst said I can t wait to get into a position to make really bad art and get away with it At the moment if I did certain things people would look at it consider it and then say f off But after a while you can get away with things 19 Professional career EditThis section needs expansion with uniform secondary source based coverage of major career milestones including since 2010 You can help by adding to it February 2017 1987 1990 Edit 1987 Damien Hirst and Holden Rowan Old Court Gallery Windsor Arts Centre Windsor UK Curator Derek Culley 29 1988 Damien Hirst Constructions and Sculpture Old Court Gallery Windsor UK Curator Derek Culley 29 1988 Freeze Surrey Docks London UK 29 1989 New Contemporaries Institute of Contemporary Arts London UK 29 1990 Modern Medicine Building One London UK 29 1990 Gambler Building One London UK 29 1990 Building One Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery Paris FR 29 1991 1994 Edit His first solo exhibition organised by Tamara Chodzko Dial In and Out of Love was held in an unused shop on Woodstock Street in central London in 1991 30 already in 1989 he had been part of a group exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts 31 and the Emmanuel Perrotin Gallery in Paris 32 The Serpentine Gallery presented the first survey of the new generation of artists with the exhibition Broken English 33 in part curated by Hirst 34 In 1991 Hirst met the up and coming art dealer Jay Jopling who then represented him 35 In 1991 Charles Saatchi had offered to fund whatever artwork Hirst wanted to make and the result was showcased in 1992 in the first Young British Artists exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in North London Hirst s work was titled The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living and was a shark in formaldehyde in a vitrine and sold for 50 000 The shark had been caught by a commissioned fisherman in Australia and had cost 6 000 36 The exhibition also included In a Thousand Years As a result of the show Hirst was nominated for that year s Turner Prize but it was awarded to Grenville Davey Hirst s first major international presentation was in the Venice Biennale in 1993 with the work Mother and Child Divided a cow and a calf cut into sections and exhibited in a series of separate vitrines He curated the show Some Went Mad Some Ran Away in 1994 at the Serpentine Gallery in London where he exhibited Away from the Flock a sheep in a tank of formaldehyde On 9 May Mark Bridger a 35 year old artist from Oxford walked into the gallery and poured black ink into the tank and retitled the work Black Sheep He was subsequently prosecuted at Hirst s wish and was given two years probation The sculpture was restored at a cost of 1 000 When a photograph of Away from the Flock was reproduced in the 1997 book by Hirst I want to spend the rest of my life everywhere with everyone one to one always forever now the vandalism was referenced by allowing the tank to be obscured by pulling a card reproducing the effect of ink being poured into the tank this resulted in Hirst being sued by Bridger for violating his copyright on Black Sheep 37 1995 1999 Edit In 1995 Hirst won the Turner Prize New York public health officials banned Two Fucking and Two Watching featuring a rotting cow and bull because of fears of vomiting among the visitors There were solo shows in Seoul London and Salzburg He directed the video for the song Country House for the band Blur No Sense of Absolute Corruption his first solo show in the Gagosian Gallery in New York was staged the following year In London the short film Hanging Around was shown written and directed by Hirst and starring Eddie Izzard In 1997 the Sensation exhibition opened at the Royal Academy in London A Thousand Years and other works by Hirst were included but the main controversy occurred over other artists works It was nevertheless seen as the formal acceptance of the YBAs into the establishment 38 In 1997 his autobiography and art book I Want To Spend the Rest of My Life Everywhere with Everyone One to One Always Forever Now was published With Alex James of the band Blur and actor Keith Allen he formed the band Fat Les achieving a number 2 hit with a raucous football themed song Vindaloo followed up by Jerusalem with the London Gay Men s Chorus Hirst also painted a simple colour pattern for the Beagle 2 probe This pattern was to be used to calibrate the probe s cameras after it had landed on Mars He turned down the British Council s invitation to be the UK s representative at the 1999 Venice Biennale because it didn t feel right 39 He threatened to sue British Airways claiming a breach of copyright over an advert design with coloured spots for its low budget airline Go 40 2000 2004 Edit In 2000 Hirst s sculpture Hymn which Saatchi had bought for a reported 1m was given pole position at the show Ant Noises an anagram of sensation in the Saatchi Gallery Hirst was then sued himself for breach of copyright over this sculpture see Appropriation below 41 Hirst sold three more copies of his sculpture for similar amounts to the first 42 In September 2000 in New York Larry Gagosian held the Hirst show Damien Hirst Models Methods Approaches Assumptions Results and Findings 100 000 people visited the show in 12 weeks and all the work was sold 43 On 10 September 2002 on the eve of the first anniversary of the 9 11 World Trade Center attacks Hirst said in an interview with BBC News Online The thing about 9 11 is that it s kind of like an artwork in its own right It was wicked but it was devised in this way for this kind of impact It was devised visually You ve got to hand it to them on some level because they ve achieved something which nobody would have ever have thought possible especially to a country as big as America So on one level they kind of need congratulating which a lot of people shy away from which is a very dangerous thing 44 The next week following public outrage at his remarks he issued a statement through his company Science Ltd I apologise unreservedly for any upset I have caused particularly to the families of the victims of the events on that terrible day 45 In 2002 Hirst gave up smoking and drinking after his wife Maia had complained and had to move out because I was so horrible He had met Joe Strummer former lead singer of The Clash at Glastonbury in 1995 becoming good friends and going on annual family holidays with him Just before Christmas 2002 Strummer died of a heart attack This had a profound effect on Hirst who said It was the first time I felt mortal He subsequently devoted a lot of time to founding a charity Strummerville to help young musicians 17 In April 2003 the Saatchi Gallery opened at new premises in County Hall London with a show that included a Hirst retrospective This brought a developing strain in his relationship with Saatchi to a head 7 one source of contention had been who was most responsible for boosting their mutual profile Hirst disassociated himself from the retrospective to the extent of not including it in his CV 7 He was angry that a Mini car that he had decorated for charity with his trademark spots was being exhibited as a serious artwork 7 The show also scuppered a prospective Hirst retrospective at Tate Modern 7 He said Saatchi was childish 17 and I m not Charles Saatchi s barrel organ monkey He only recognises art with his wallet he believes he can affect art values with buying power and he still believes he can do it 7 In September 2003 he had an exhibition Romance in the Age of Uncertainty at Jay Jopling s White Cube gallery in London which made him a reported 11m 17 bringing his wealth to over 35m It was reported that a sculpture Charity had been sold for 1 5m to a Korean Kim Chang Il who intended to exhibit it in his department store s gallery in Seoul 46 The 22 foot 6 7m 6 ton sculpture was based on the 1960s Spastic Society s model which is of a girl in leg irons holding a collecting box In Hirst s version the collecting box is shown broken open and is empty Charity was exhibited in the centre of Hoxton Square in front of White Cube Inside the gallery downstairs were 12 vitrines representing Jesus s disciples each case containing mostly gruesome often blood stained items relevant to the particular disciple At the end was an empty vitrine representing Christ Upstairs were four small glass cases each containing a cow s head stuck with scissors and knives It has been described as an extraordinarily spiritual experience in the tradition of Catholic imagery 47 At this time Hirst bought back 12 works from Saatchi a third of Saatchi s holdings of Hirst s early works through Jay Jopling reportedly for more than 8 million Hirst had sold these pieces to Saatchi in the early 1990s for rather less his first installations costing under 10 000 7 On 24 May 2004 a fire in the Momart storage warehouse destroyed many works from the Saatchi collection including 17 of Hirst s although the sculpture Charity survived as it was outside in the builder s yard That July Hirst said of Saatchi I respect Charles There s not really a feud If I see him we speak but we were never really drinking buddies 17 Hirst designed a cover image for the Band Aid 20 charity single featuring the Grim Reaper in late 2004 and image showing an African child perched on his knee 48 This design was not to the liking of the record company executives who and was replaced by reindeer in the snow standing next to a child 49 In December 2004 The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living was sold by Saatchi to American collector Steve Cohen for 8 million in a deal negotiated by Hirst s New York agent Gagosian 50 Cohen a Greenwich hedge fund manager then donated the work to The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Sir Nicholas Serota had wanted to acquire it for the Tate Gallery and Hugo Swire Shadow Minister for the Arts tabled a question to ask if the government would ensure it stayed in the country 51 2005 2009 Edit Hirst exhibited 30 paintings at the Gagosian Gallery in New York in March 2005 These had taken 3 years to complete They were closely based on photos mostly by assistants who were rotated between paintings but with a final finish by Hirst 52 Also in 2005 Hirst founded the art book publisher Other Criteria 53 In February 2006 he opened a major show in Mexico at the Hilario Galguera Gallery called The Death of God Towards a Better Understanding of Life without God aboard The Ship of Fools an exhibition that attracted considerable media coverage as Hirst s first show in Latin America 54 In June that year he exhibited alongside the work of Francis Bacon Triptychs at the Gagosian Gallery Britannia Street London an exhibition that included the vitrine A Thousand Years 1990 and four triptychs paintings medicine cabinets and a new formaldehyde work entitled The Tranquility of Solitude For George Dyer influenced by Bacon 55 For the Love of God by Damien Hirst 2007 A Thousand Years 1990 56 contains an actual life cycle Maggots hatch inside a white minimal box turn into flies then feed on a bloody severed cow s head on the floor of a claustrophobic glass vitrine Above hatched flies buzz around in the closed space Many meet a violent end in an insect o cutor others survive to continue the cycle 57 A Thousand Years was admired by Bacon who in a letter to a friend a month before he died wrote about the experience of seeing the work at the Saatchi Gallery in London 58 Margarita Coppack notes that It is as if Bacon a painter with no direct heir in that medium was handing the baton on to a new generation 59 Hirst has openly acknowledged his debt to Bacon 60 absorbing the painter s visceral images and obsessions early on and giving them concrete existence in sculptural form with works like A Thousand Years 61 Hirst gained the world record for the most expensive work of art by a living artist his Lullaby Spring in June 2007 62 when a 3 metre wide steel cabinet with 6 136 pills sold for 19 2 million dollars to Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani the Emir of Qatar 62 In June 2007 Beyond Belief an exhibition of Hirst s new work opened at the White Cube gallery in London The centre piece a Memento Mori titled For the Love of God was a human skull recreated in platinum and adorned with 8 601 diamonds weighing a total of 1 106 18 carats 63 Approximately 15 000 000 worth of diamonds were used It was modelled on an 18th century skull but the only surviving human part of the original is the teeth The asking price for For the Love of God was 50 000 000 100 million or 75 million euros It didn t sell outright 64 and on 30 August 2008 was sold to a consortium that included Hirst himself and his gallery White Cube 64 In November 2008 the skull was exhibited at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam next to an exhibition of paintings from the museum collection selected by Hirst Wim Pijbes the museum director said of the exhibition It boosts our image Of course we do the Old Masters but we are not a yesterday institution It s for now And Damien Hirst shows this in a very strong way 65 In December 2008 Hirst contacted the Design and Artists Copyright Society DACS demanding action be taken over works containing images of his skull sculpture For the Love of God made by a 16 year old graffiti artist Cartrain and sold on the internet gallery 100artworks com On the advice of his gallery Cartrain handed over the artworks to DACS and forfeited the 200 he had made he said I met Christian Zimmermann from DACS who told me Hirst personally ordered action on the matter 66 In June 2009 copyright lawyer Paul Tackaberry compared the two images and said This is fairly non contentious legally Ask yourself what portion of the original and not just the quantity but also the quality appears in the new work If a substantial portion of the original appears in the new work then that s all you need for copyright infringement Quantitatively about 80 of the skull is in the second image 67 In April September 2009 the exhibition Requiem took place in the Victor Pinchuk art centre that was instrumental in military invasion on NATO in Ukraine and provided root for financing The Maidan eIn October 2009 Hirst revealed that he had been painting with his own hand in a style influenced by Francis Bacon for several years His show of these paintings No Love Lost was at the Wallace Collection in London 68 2010 2014 Edit In 2011 Damien Hirst designed the cover of the Red Hot Chili Peppers album I m with You 69 Hirst s representation of the British Union Flag formed the arena centrepiece for the 2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in London 70 In January 2013 Hirst became the third British artist to design the Brit Awards statue using his signature NEO Pop art style inspired by his 2000 LSD spot painting 71 In October 2014 Hirst exhibited big scale capsules pills and medicines at the Paul Stolper Gallery titled Schizophrenogenesis 72 73 2015 present Edit In April 2016 a study published in Analytical Methods claimed Hirst s preserved carcasses leaked formaldehyde gas above legal limits at Tate Modern however this study was shown to be flawed 74 In 2017 he organised with Pinault Foundation a solo exhibition in Venice contemporarily to the Biennale in two places in the city Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana The title is Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable purporting to present ancient treasures from a sunken Greek ship with pieces that range from Ancient Egyptian alike items to Disney character reproductions encrusted with shells and corals 75 In July 2021 through January 2022 Hirst s series Cherry Blossoms was exhibited at the Foundation Cartier in Paris 76 The exhibition was then moved to the National Art Center in Tokyo in 2022 The show marked Hirst s first major solo exhibition in Japan 77 The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living Edit Main article The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living This artwork features a large tiger shark suspended in formaldehyde The tank in which the shark is floating creates the illusion of the animal being cut into three pieces due to the container looking like three separate sections The work was created in 1991 and since then the formaldehyde preserving the shark has slowly eaten away at the animal s body which shows signs of decay 78 Hirst says that the formaldehyde surrounding the shark is the process of death and decay 50 Some critics argue that the minimalistic qualities of the work coinciding with the stereotypical death theme are too bland for such a prestigious artist One critic wrote But the famous shark shackled to its coffeebar existentialist title The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living seems ever more dilapidated more fairground sideshow with every dowdy showing What cliched menace it may once have theoretically possessed has evaporated 79 Another art critic Luke White disagrees saying that others had earlier perceived sharks as ugly and dangerous but by the end of the century they found them instead exhilarating fascinating and sublime White argues that sharks have been seen as transcendent awe inspiring creatures throughout centuries a creature that is the embodiment of sublimitude clarification needed as well as a metaphorical representation of our mind helps clarification needed relaying the importance of how special our thoughts really are verification needed 80 Beautiful Inside My Head Forever Edit Main article Beautiful Inside My Head ForeverBeautiful Inside My Head Forever was a two day auction of Hirst s new work at Sotheby s London taking place on 15 and 16 September 2008 11 It was unusual as he bypassed galleries and sold directly to the public 81 Writing in The Independent Cahal Milmo said that the idea of the auction was conceived by Hirst s business advisor of 13 years Frank Dunphy who had to overcome Hirst s initial reluctance about the idea 82 Hirst eventually defended the concept and refuted the accusation that he was only interested in making money People always worry that money somehow tarnishes art but I always thought it was disgusting that people like Van Gogh never made any money It s important to make sure that the art takes precedence over the money Most people worry that somehow you lose your integrity Frank said to me a long time ago Always have to make sure that you use the money to chase the art and not the art to chase the money And I think that s true you have to look at that very carefully 83 The sale raised 111 million 198 million for 218 items 12 The auction exceeded expectations 12 and was ten times higher than the existing Sotheby s record for a single artist sale 84 occurring as the financial markets plunged 84 The Sunday Times said that Hirst s business colleagues had propped up 84 the sale prices making purchases or bids which totalled over half of the 70 5 million spent on the first sale day 84 Harry Blain of the Haunch of Venison gallery said that bids were entered on behalf of clients wishing to acquire the work 84 Hirst art collecting EditIn November 2006 Hirst was curator of In the darkest hour there may be light shown at the Serpentine Gallery London the first public exhibition of a small part of his own collection 85 Now known as the murderme collection this significant accumulation of works spans several generations of international artists from well known figures such as Francis Bacon Jeff Koons Tracey Emin Richard Prince Banksy and Andy Warhol to British painters such as John Bellany John Hoyland and Gary Hume 86 and artists in earlier stages of their careers Rachel Howard 87 David Choe Ross Minoru Laing Nicholas Lumb Tom Ormond and Dan Baldwin 88 Hirst is currently restoring the Grade I listed Toddington Manor near Cheltenham where he intends to eventually house the complete collection 89 In 2007 Hirst donated the 1991 sculptures The Acquired Inability to Escape and Life Without You and the 2002 work Who is Afraid of the Dark fly painting and an exhibition copy from 2007 of Mother and Child Divided to Tate from his own personal collection of works 90 In 2010 Hirst was among the unsuccessful bidders to take over the Magazine Building a 19th century structure in Kensington Gardens which reopened in 2013 as the Serpentine Sackler Gallery after its conversion by Zaha Hadid 91 In March 2012 he outlined his plans to open a gallery in Vauxhall London specifically designed to exhibit his personal collection which includes five pieces by Francis Bacon The Newport Street Gallery opened in October 2015 It is located in a former theater carpentry and scenery production workshops redesigned by Peter St John and Adam Caruso and runs the length of Newport Street in Vauxhall 92 91 Awards and recognition EditHirst was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1992 for his first Young British Artists exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in North London which included his The Physical Impossibility of Death with the award going to Grenville Davey that year 93 Hirst won the Turner Prize in 1995 94 He was asked to represent the UK in the Venice Biennale in 1999 or to become a Royal Academian but refused 95 In 2012 Hirst was among the British cultural icons selected by artist Sir Peter Blake to appear in a new version of his album cover for the Beatles Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band to celebrate the British cultural figures of his life that he most admires 96 Critical responses EditPositive Edit Hirst has been praised in recognition of his celebrity and the way this has galvanised interest in the arts raising the profile of British art and helping to re create the image of Cool Britannia In the mid 1990s the then Heritage Secretary Virginia Bottomley recognised him as a pioneer of the British art movement and even sheep farmers were pleased he had raised increased interest in British lamb 97 Janet Street Porter praised his originality which had brought art to new audiences and was the art world equivalent of the Oasis concerts at Earl s Court 97 Andres Serrano is also known for shocking work and understands that contemporary fame does not necessarily equate to lasting fame but backs Hirst Damien is very clever First you get the attention Whether or not it will stand the test of time I don t know but I think it will 97 Sir Nicholas Serota commented Damien is something of a showman It is very difficult to be an artist when there is huge public and media attention Because Damien Hirst has been built up as a very important figure there are plenty of sceptics ready to put the knife in 97 Tracey Emin said There is no comparison between him and me he developed a whole new way of making art and he s clearly in a league of his own It would be like making comparisons with Warhol 98 Despite Hirst s insults to him Saatchi remains a staunch supporter labelling Hirst a genius 97 and stating General art books dated 2105 will be as brutal about editing the late 20th century as they are about almost all other centuries Every artist other than Jackson Pollock Andy Warhol Donald Judd and Damien Hirst will be a footnote 99 Hirst was among the names in Blake Gopnik s 2011 list The 10 Most Important Artists of Today with Gopnik interpreting Hirst s career as a metaphor for how consumption has become our guiding force 100 Negative Edit There has been equally vehement opposition to Hirst s work Of Hirst s work the former Evening Standard art critic Brian Sewell expressed the following I don t think of it as art It is no more interesting than a stuffed pike over a pub door Indeed there may well be more art in a stuffed pike than a dead sheep 101 The Stuckist art group was founded in 1999 with a specific anti Britart agenda by Charles Thomson and Billy Childish 102 Hirst is one of their main targets They wrote referring to a Channel 4 programme on Hirst The fact that Hirst s work does mirror society is not its strength but its weakness and the reason it is guaranteed to decline artistically and financially as current social modes become outmoded What Hirst has insightfully observed of his spin paintings in Life and Death and Damien Hirst is the only comment that needs to be made of his entire oeuvre They re bright and they re zany but there s fuck all there at the end of the day 101 A Dead Shark Isn t Art Stuckism International Gallery 2003 103 In 2003 under the title A Dead Shark Isn t Art the Stuckism International Gallery exhibited a shark which had first been put on public display two years before Hirst s by Eddie Saunders in his Shoreditch shop JD Electrical Supplies Thomson asked If Hirst s shark is recognised as great art then how come Eddie s which was on exhibition for two years beforehand isn t Do we perhaps have here an undiscovered artist of genius who got there first or is it that a dead shark isn t art at all 103 The Stuckists suggested that Hirst may have got the idea for his work from Saunders shop display 104 In a 2008 Channel 4 documentary called The Mona Lisa Curse art critic Robert Hughes claimed that Hirst s work was tacky and absurd Hughes said it was a little miracle that the value of 5 million was put on Hirst s Virgin Mother a 35 foot bronze statue which was made by someone with so little facility 105 Hughes called Hirst s shark in formaldehyde the world s most over rated marine organism and attacked the artist for functioning like a commercial brand making the case that Hirst and his work proved that financial value was now the only meaning that remained for art 105 Hirst s 2009 show No Love Lost of paintings by his own hand at the Wallace Collection in London received one of the most unanimously negative responses to any exhibition in living memory 68 Tom Lubbock of The Independent called Hirst s work derivative weak and boring 106 Hirst as a painter is at about the level of a not very promising first year art student 106 Rachel Campbell Johnston of The Times said it was shockingly bad 106 A 2012 exhibition of paintings by Hirst at the White Cube gallery in Bermondsey entitled Two Weeks One Summer provoked in The Guardian the comment that Hirst can kid himself he is an Old Master and have the art world go along with the fantasy 107 Julian Spalding British art critic and author of the book Con Art Why You Should Sell Your Damien Hirsts While You Can 108 has said It s often been proposed seriously that Damien Hirst is a greater artist than Michelangelo because he had the idea for a shark in a tank whereas Michelangelo didn t have the idea for his David but The emperor has nothing on When the penny drops that these are not art it s all going to collapse Hirst should not be in the Tate He s not an artist What separates Michelangelo from Hirst is that Michelangelo was an artist and Hirst isn t 109 110 Hirst s 2012 retrospective at the Tate Gallery while setting records for attendance also received many complaints Members of the public wrote to the state funded gallery accusing it of wasting taxpayers money by showcasing art that was repetitive meaningless and almost universally awful 111 Hirst s work has also been a frequent subject of criticism in the tabloid press A Daily Mail headline read For 1 000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces Today pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all Norman Tebbit commenting on the Sensation exhibition wrote Have they gone stark raving mad The works of the artist are lumps of dead animals There are thousands of young artists who didn t get a look in presumably because their work was too attractive to sane people Modern art experts never learn 101 Appropriation and plagiarism claims EditIn 1999 chef Marco Pierre White said Hirst s Butterflies on Mars had plagiarised his own work Rising Sun which he then put on display in the restaurant Quo Vadis in place of Hirst s work 112 Spiritus Callidus 2 by John Lekay 1993 crystal skull In 2000 Hirst was sued for breach of copyright over his sculpture Hymn which was a 20 foot 6 1 m six ton enlargement of his son Connor s 14 Young Scientist Anatomy Set designed by Norman Emms 10 000 of which are sold a year by Hull based toy manufacturer Humbrol for 14 99 each 41 Hirst paid an undisclosed sum to two charities Children Nationwide and the Toy Trust in an out of court settlement 41 as well as a good will payment to Emms 112 The charitable donation was less than Emms had hoped for Hirst also agreed to restrictions on further reproductions of his sculpture 41 In 2006 a graphic artist and former research associate at the Royal College of Art Robert Dixon author of Mathographics alleged that Hirst s print Valium had unmistakable similarities to one of his own designs Hirst s manager contested this by explaining the origin of Hirst s piece was from a book The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry 1991 not realising this was one place where Dixon s design had been published 112 113 In 2007 artist John LeKay a friend of Damien Hirst between 1992 and 1994 was reported by Dalya Alberge of The Times to have provided ideas and inspirations for a variety of his later works including having given him a marked up duplicate copy of a Carolina Biological Supply Company catalogue that LeKay had been using as inspiration and supply for his work noting that You have no idea how much he got from this catalogue The Cow Divided is on page 647 it is a model of a cow divided down the centre like his piece a reference to Hirst s work Mother and Child Divided a cow and calf cut in half and placed in formaldehyde 113 LeKay also suggests that Hirst copied the idea of For the Love of God from his work on crystal skulls in 1993 saying I would like Damien to acknowledge that John really did inspire the skull and influenced my work a lot 113 Copyright lawyer Paul Tackaberry reviewed images of LeKay s and Hirst s work and saw no basis for any appropriation rising to the legal level of a copyright infringement 67 In 2010 in 3 AM Magazine and in The Jackdaw Charles Thomson argued that there are 15 cases where Hirst plagiarised the work of others including his enlarged version of an anatomical torso model Hymn 1999 which Thomson presents alongside a comparable John LeKay s anatomical torso model from Carolina Science Yin and Yang 1990 and Hirst s In Nomine Patris In the Name of the Father 2005 which presents a split open crucified sheep in a tank of formaldehyde after John LeKay s comparably posed split open crucified sheep entitled This is My Body This is My Blood 1987 mounted on a wooden board 114 115 116 117 Other examples cited were the similarity of Hirst s cabinets with shelves and bottles e g My Way 1991 which expanded to become his room size installation Pharmacy 1992 which Thomson relates to a Joseph Cornell display of cabinet with shelves and bottles Pharmacy 1943 and Hirst s appropriation of concept from Lori Precious who had made stained glass window effects from butterfly wings from 1994 a number of years before Hirst The art gallery lemon sky projects editions exhibited a selection of these works by Precious at the Year 06 Contemporary Art Fair in London in October 2006 where these pieces were viewed by a large audience and would have been seen at that time to have credibly been plagiarized 114 116 117 Thomson also suggested that Hirst s spin paintings and installation of a ball on a jet of air were not original since similar pieces had been made in the 1960s 114 116 117 118 A spokesperson for Hirst said the article was poor journalism and that Hirst would be making a comprehensive rebuttal of the claims 119 In May 2017 Hirst was accused of copying and appropriating Yoruba art from Ile Ifẹ in his work Golden Heads Female which is on display in his exhibition Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable at the Venice Biennale 120 121 122 The work said critics was not given appropriate context for viewers 122 Commenting on his collection Hirst has said As a human being as you go through life you just do collect It was that sort of entropic collecting that I found myself interested in just amassing stuff while you re alive 123 In 2022 artist and writer Joe Machine accused Hirst of plagiarism of his cherry blossom paintings the 16th accusation of plagiarism against Hirst 124 Hirst business ventures EditThis section needs expansion with better source based coverage of the commercial aspects of Hirst s art endeavours You can help by adding to it February 2017 Work philosophy Edit Although Hirst participated physically in the making of early works 125 he has always needed assistants for instance Carl Freedman helped with the first vitrines 126 and the current volume of work produced necessitates a factory setup 127 this has led to questions about authenticity as was highlighted in 1997 when a spin painting that Hirst said was a forgery appeared at sale citation needed although he had previously said that he often had nothing to do with the creation of these pieces citation needed Hirst said that he only painted five spot paintings himself because I couldn t be fucking arsed doing it he described his efforts as shite They re shit compared to the best person who ever painted spots for me was Rachel She s brilliant Absolutely fucking brilliant The best spot painting you can have by me is one painted by Rachel He also describes another painting assistant who was leaving and asked for one of the paintings Hirst told her to make one of your own And she said No I want one of yours But the only difference between one painted by her and one of mine is the money 128 By February 1999 two assistants had painted 300 spot paintings Hirst sees the real creative act as being the conception not the execution and that as the progenitor of the idea he is therefore the artist Art goes on in your head If you said something interesting that might be a title for a work of art and I d write it down Art comes from everywhere It s your response to your surroundings There are on going ideas I ve been working out for years like how to make a rainbow in a gallery I ve always got a massive list of titles of ideas for shows and of works without titles 17 Hirst is also known to volunteer repair work on his projects after a client has made a purchase For example this service was offered in the case of the suspended shark purchased by Steven A Cohen 129 130 131 Restaurant ventures Edit Hirst had a short lived partnership with chef Marco Pierre White in the restaurant Quo Vadis His best known restaurant involvement was Pharmacy located in Notting Hill London which closed in 2004 Although one of the owners Hirst had only leased his art work to the restaurant so he was able to retrieve and sell it at a Sotheby s auction earning over 11 million Some of the work had been adapted e g by signing it prior to the auction 132 Hirst is a co owner of the seafood restaurant 11 The Quay in the English seaside town of Ilfracombe 133 In 2016 Damien Hirst designed the interiors of his new restaurant Pharmacy 2 at the Newport Street Gallery in Vauxhall London 134 Net worth Edit Art by Hirst sold at his auction in 2008 Beautiful Inside My Head Forever raised US 198 million It is said to be the largest amount raised by any living artist to date 135 Hirst is reputed to be the richest living artist to date 6 In 2009 the annually collated chart of the wealthiest individuals in Britain and Ireland Sunday Times Rich List placed Hirst at joint number 238 with a net worth of 235m 136 Hirst s wealth was valued at 215m in the 2010 Sunday Times Rich List making him Britain s wealthiest artist 5 137 Works published shown sold EditWritten Edit This section needs expansion with complete list of written works based on some published source with each entry being complete and in good format as begun You can help by adding to it February 2017 Hirst Damien 2014 The Complete Spot Paintings New York NY Harry N Abrams ISBN 978 1906967482 Retrieved 22 February 2017 2013 ABC New York NY Harry N Abrams ISBN 978 1906967635 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Art Edit His works include Pharmacy 1992 a life size recreation of a chemist s shop 138 Away from the Flock 1994 composed of a dead sheep in a glass tank of formaldehyde 139 Beautiful Axe Slash Gosh Painting 1999 Signed on the reverse Gloss household paint on canvas 140 The Virgin Mother a massive sculpture depicting a pregnant female human with layers removed from one side to expose the fœtus muscle and tissue layers and skull underneath This work was purchased by real estate magnate Aby Rosen for display on the plaza of one of his properties the Lever House in New York City 141 Painting By Numbers 2001 a do it yourself painting kit comprising a stamped canvas brushes and 90 paint tins in plexiglass designed to make a dot painting 142 Part of the exhibition was binned by a gallery cleaner who mistook it for trash 143 The Dream 2008 a simulated unicorn in a tank of formaldehyde solution 144 Spin Drawing for Women s Equality 2016 auctioned as a fundraiser for the Women s Equality Party 145 Butterfly Rainbow 2020 146 Personal life EditBetween 1992 and 2012 Hirst lived with his American girlfriend Maia Norman with whom he has three sons born 1995 2000 and 2005 147 better source needed Since becoming a father Hirst has spent most of his time at his remote farmhouse near Combe Martin in Devon Hirst and Norman were never married 148 although Hirst had referred to Norman as his common law wife 149 Hirst has admitted serious drug and alcohol problems during a ten year period from the early 1990s I started taking cocaine and drink I turned into a babbling fucking wreck 128 During this time he was known for his wild behaviour and eccentric acts including for example putting a cigarette in the end of his penis in front of journalists 150 He is a friend of Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood and 7 time World Snooker Champion Ronnie O Sullivan 151 Charitable work Edit Hirst is a supporter of the indigenous rights organisation Survival International 152 In September 2008 Hirst donated the work Beautiful Love Survival at the Sotheby s London sale Beautiful Inside My Head Forever to raise money for this organisation 153 154 Later he also contributed his writing to the book We Are One A Celebration of Tribal Peoples released in October 2009 in support of Survival The book explores the existence of and threats to indigenous cultures around the world 155 156 In 2016 he donated artworks for the secret auction of Art on a Postcard 157 a charity supporting the fight against Hepatitis C 158 NFTs EditIn July 2021 Hirst announced his first NFT project named The Currency it consisted of 10 000 unique hand painted dot covered works on paper each one corresponding to a non fungible token Two months later the project revenued a total of 25 000 000 159 Hirst instructed those who bought pieces from his latest collection to choose either the physical artwork or the NFT representing it Buyers were informed that corresponding artworks for the non exchanged NFTs would be destroyed with the first 1 000 artworks being burned on October 11 2022 He streamed the burning of his physical pieces on Instagram live from his London gallery and is set to burn thousands more of his artwork to complete the transformation of the selected artworks so they can exist solely as NFTs 160 It has been estimated the works being burned are collectively worth almost 10 million 161 See also EditCharles Saatchi Stuckist John LeKay Young British ArtistsReferences Edit Nicholson Octavia Hirst Damien Steven Oxford Art Online subscription Retrieved 9 November 2008 Glossary Young British Artists YBA Tate Etc Retrieved 14 July 2009 Hirst generation missing from Turner prize 2000 shortlist The Guardian 14 June 2000 Retrieved 11 September 2009 Damien Hirst Is Still the UK s Richest Artist With a Net Worth of 384 Million According to the Sunday Times s Rich List artnet News 18 May 2020 Retrieved 9 December 2020 a b Richard Brooks It s the fame I crave says Damien Hirst The Times 28 March 2010 a b Graham Dixon Andrew Artworld insanity The Sunday Telegraph p 28 21 September 2008 a b c d e f g Hirst Buys His Art back from Saatchi The Guardian 27 November 2003 Retrieved 20 March 2006 http www nationalgalleries org collection ar home 4 6685 4966 Archived 13 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Brooks Richard Damien Hirst s earliest painting goes on sale The Sunday Times 6 April 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2010 Barker Godfrey Jury Louise Even his fag ends sell as Hirst art auction hits 100 million London Evening Standard 16 September 2008 Retrieved 22 July 2009 a b c Akbar Arifa 16 September 2008 A formaldehyde frenzy as buyers snap up Hirst works The Independent Retrieved 16 September 2008 a b c Parsons Neal 16 September 2008 Update 1 Hirst s London art sale defies economic blues Reuters Retrieved 16 September 2008 Dyer Clare Hirst pays up for Hymn that wasn t his The Guardian 19 May 2000 Retrieved 15 September 2010 findmypast co uk Retrieved 23 February 2017 Biography Retrieved 4 October 2017 a b c d e Chaundy Bob 20 September 2002 Newsmakers Damien Hirst Shockaholic BBC News Retrieved 22 February 2017 a b c d e f g h i Jardine Cassandra 26 July 2004 I Knew It Was Time to Clean up My Act The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 22 February 2017 Hattenstone Simon 14 November 2009 Damien Hirst Anyone can be Rembrandt The Guardian Retrieved 22 February 2017 a b c Spalding Julian 8 May 2003 Why it s OK Not to Like Modern Art The Times Retrieved 22 February 2017 Connolly Cressida 24 November 2007 Michael Craig Martin Out of the Ordinary The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 22 February 2017 Lewis Schiff Business Brilliant Surprising Lessons from the Greatest Self Made Business Icons Harper Collins 2013 ISBN 0062253522 Elkann Alain 8 January 2017 Anthony d Offay Alain Elkann Interviews Retrieved 6 October 2022 The Many Many Art World Offspring of London Dealer Anthony D Offay Artspace Retrieved 6 October 2022 Craig Martin Michael 29 March 2012 My pupil Damien Hirst Michael Craig Martin on the making of art s wunderkind The Independent Retrieved 6 October 2022 The Freeze catalogue 1988 Rainbird Sean Are We as a Society Going to Carry on Treating People This Way Michael Landy s Scrapheap Services Tate Gallery Spring 2004 Retrieved 22 October 2008 a b Archer Michael Oranges and Lemons and Oranges and Bananas Acme 2001 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Market News Counter The Daily Telegraph 17 March 2003 Retrieved 22 October 2008 a b c d e f g BlainSouthernCV Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 112 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 64 Bagley Christopher 10 March 2014 Emmanuel Perrotin French Connection W Magazine Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 71 Gallaccio Anya Broken English August 91 Tate Etc Retrieved 27 August 2018 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 65 Saatchi mulls 6 25m shark offer BBC Retrieved 23 February 2007 Willcock John 14 September 1998 Who s Suing Whom The case of the pickled sheep The Independent London Retrieved 11 June 2012 Beckett Andy Shock art to shop art The Guardian p T 002 28 August 1997 The Guardian 6 October 2001 Retrieved 19 March 2006 Negus Keith Pickering Michael J 2004 Creativity Communication and Cultural Value Sage p 65 ISBN 9781847871503 Retrieved 22 February 2017 a b c d Hirst Pays up in Toy Row on BBC site Retrieved 19 March 2006 Charles Saatchi Could Have Bought Four Davids for the Price of Tracey Emin s Bed The Daily Telegraph 7 January 2006 Retrieved 20 March 2006 Damien Hirst Art Bios Retrieved 27 August 2018 Allison Rebecca 11 September 2002 9 11 wicked but a work of art says Damien Hirst The Guardian Retrieved 11 November 2008 Hirst apologies for 11 Sept Comments BBC website Retrieved 26 March 2006 9 September 2003 Holy Cow Hirst Turns to Religion The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 20 March 2006 Dorment Richard 10 September 2003 Damien Bares His Soul The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 20 March 2006 Kitts Alex 2011 Dizzee Rascal Tales from Da Corner Hachette ISBN 9781409133988 Damien Hirst s Band Aid cover banned Digital Spy 17 November 2004 Retrieved 27 August 2018 a b Vogel Carol Swimming With Famous Dead Sharks The New York Times Retrieved 27 August 2018 Hugo Swire MP for East Devon Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 18 February 2006 Science Photo Library Press Releases Archived from the original on 23 March 2005 Retrieved 20 March 2006 Criteria Other Damien Hirst s Other Criteria Opens First US Location Retrieved 4 January 2019 Damien Hirst The Death of God Signed Other Criteria Retrieved 27 August 2018 Crompton Sarah 11 July 2006 Long live mortality The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2018 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 142 Keats Jonathon 20 July 2012 Is Damien Hirst The World s Most Misunderstood Artist Forbes Luke Ben 3 December 2009 Doom Gloom and Damien Hirst London Evening Standard Retrieved 27 August 2018 Anderson Jamie Reckhenrich Jorg Kupp Martin 2011 The Fine Art of Success How Learning Great Art Can Create Great Business John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781119992530 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 86 Gagosian Gallery Damien Hirst Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2006 a b Hirst cabinet sets auction record BBC News 22 June 2007 Retrieved 13 February 2013 Beyond Belief https whitecube com exhibitions exhibition damien hirst masons yard hoxton square 2007 a b Thornton Sarah Damien Hirst is rewriting the rules of the market 2 The Art Newspaper 17 July 2008 Retrieved 11 August 2008 1 June 2009 The project team Communicating Hirst at the Rijksmuseum Art Design amp Publicity Retrieved 15 December 2009 Akbar Arifa 6 December 2008 Hirst demands share of artist s 65 copies The Independent Retrieved 6 December 2008 a b Preece Robert June 2009 Reality check When appropriation becomes copyright infringement Sculpture magazine AD amp P Retrieved 19 June 2009 a b Hudson Mark It couldn t get worse for Damien Hirst The Daily Telegraph 14 October 2009 Red Hot Chili Peppers reveal Damien Hirst designed artwork for I m With You NME magazine 6 July 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2021 Williams Richard 13 August 2012 A raucous but poignant pageant of popular culture closes the Games The Guardian London pp 2 3 Retrieved 13 August 2012 BRIT Award Spot Statue Designed by British Artist Damien Hirst Moresay Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 13 January 2013 Sooke Alastair Inside Damien Hirst s new exhibition with Alastair Sooke The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 10 October 2014 Retrieved 9 October 2014 Glover Michael Damien Hirst exhibition review Schizophrenogenesis is a bitter pill to swallow The Independent Retrieved 9 October 2014 Damien Hirst formaldehyde artworks posed no risk to public BBC Retrieved 17 July 2016 Grassi Palazzo Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable Palazzo Grassi Damien Hirst s cherry blossoms will be exhibited at the Foundation Cartier in Paris Vogue France in French 6 May 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2022 Tokyo is a getting a Damien Hirst solo show featuring his new cherry blossom series Time Out Tokyo Retrieved 13 April 2022 Hirst Damien Natural History Damien Hirst Bureau for Visual Affairs Damien Hirst Retrieved 8 December 2014 Raine Craig April 2012 Damien Hirst Pretty vacant Retrieved 22 February 2017 Subtitle There are only two good works in the Tate s Damien Hirst retrospective a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help White Luke January 2013 Damien Hirst s Shark Nature Capitalism and the Sublime Tate org Tate ISBN 9781849763875 Retrieved 8 December 2014 Singh Anita Damien Hirst auction expected to fetch 65 million The Daily Telegraph 29 July 2008 Milmo Cahal Mr 10 per cent and he s worth every penny The Independent 18 September 2008 Retrieved 29 March 2010 Robecchi Michele Damien Hirst Diamonds Are Forever Flash Art July September 2010 a b c d e The Sunday Times 21 September 2008 Hirst dealers bolster prices at record sale The Sunday Times Retrieved 10 February 2009 Spears Meers Emily High Art Lite in the Darkest Hour Oxonian Review 1 March 2007 Retrieved 29 December 2010 Freedom not Genius Works from Damien Hirst s Murderme Collection Damien Hirst Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 3 February 2014 Gleadell Colin 30 January 2007 Market news Sotheby s Jamie Reid Rachel Howard and more The Telegraph Archived from the original on 20 December 2008 Retrieved 27 August 2018 In The Darkest Hour There May Be Light Works from Damien Hirst s Murderme Collection serpentinegallery org Retrieved 23 February 2017 This is London Magazine www thisislondon co uk Archived from the original on 27 April 2009 Press office Tate Etc Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Retrieved 23 February 2017 a b Gareth Harris 22 July 2014 1 The Art Newspaper Damien Hirst s new gallery opens with abstract great John Hoyland London Evening Standard 30 June 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 70 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 15 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 73 New faces on Sgt Pepper album cover for artist Peter Blake s 80th birthday The Guardian 5 October 2016 a b c d e Damien Hirst Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 Retrieved 20 March 2006 Independent Online Edition gt Features Archived from the original on 14 June 2006 Retrieved 20 March 2006 Art Newspaper interview on Saatchi Gallery site Retrieved 19 March 2006 Gopnik Blake 5 June 2011 The 10 Most Important Artists of Today Newsweek Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b c Childish Billy Childish amp Thomson Charles December 2000 Hirst s Art Against A Stuckist Critique of Damien Hirst Channel 4 Archived from the original on 3 May 2006 Retrieved 22 February 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Stuckist anti Britart manifesto 4 August 1999 Retrieved 20 March 2006 a b Alberge Dalya 10 April 2003 Traditionalists mark shark attack on Hirst The Times Retrieved 6 February 2008 A Dead Shark Isn t Art Stuckism International web site Retrieved 20 March 2006 a b Thorpe Vanessa 7 September 2008 Top critic lashes out at Hirst s tacky art The Guardian London Retrieved 7 September 2008 a b c Press views Damien Hirst s paintings BBC 4 October 2009 Retrieved 25 December 2009 Jones Jonathan 22 May 2012 Damien Hirst Two Weeks One Summer review The Guardian London Retrieved 23 May 2012 Morris Harvey 31 March 2012 What Price a Dead Shark The New York Times Retrieved 23 February 2017 Sell up now before it s too late expert tells Damien Hirst fans The Independent 27 March 2012 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Julian Spalding attacks Damien Hirst con art BBC News BBC 27 March 2012 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Ben Riley Smith 28 August 2013 Damien Hirst Tate retrospective triggered wave of complaints about meaningless artwork The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 a b c Alberge Dalya 14 August 2003 Spot the difference as artist accuses Hirst of copying The Times Retrieved 8 February 2008 a b c Alberge Dalya 27 June 2007 My old friend Damien stole my skull idea The Times Retrieved 10 December 2007 a b c Thomson Charles 14 September 2010 Gallix Andrew ed Stuck Inn XI The Art Damien Hirst Stole 3 AM Magazine Saint Denis FRA Retrieved 22 February 2017 Thomson Charles 2010 The Art Damien Hirst Stole The Jackdaw No Sept Oct a b c Thomson Charles 9 April 2011 Gallix Andrew ed Stuck Inn XII The Art Damien Hirst Stole Part 2 3 AM Magazine Saint Denis FRA Retrieved 22 February 2017 a b c Alberge Dalya Damien Hirst faces eight new claims of plagiarism The Guardian 2 September 2010 Retrieved 2 September 2010 Daily Telegraph Staff Damien Hirst faces new plagiarism claims The Daily Telegraph 3 September 2010 Damien Hirst art works inspired by others BBC 2 September 2010 Retrieved 3 September 2010 Editor Online 10 May 2017 Nigerians Express Outrage as British Artist Damien Hirst Copies Ife Sculpture Without Giving Credit THISDAYLIVE Retrieved 10 May 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a last has generic name help Frank Priscilla 9 May 2017 Damien Hirst Accused of Appropriating Nigerian Art Whitewashing History HuffPost Retrieved 10 May 2017 a b Meiselman Jessica 12 May 2017 Damien Hirst Show Sparks Accusations of Cultural Appropriation Artsy Retrieved 4 June 2017 New Statesman Portrait of the artist Archived from the original on 22 December 2008 Retrieved 12 December 2008 Damien Hirst stole my cherry blossom artist faces plagiarism claim number 16 The Guardian 6 February 2022 Retrieved 6 February 2022 Blanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag p 181 Owens Michael July 2015 Damien Hirst and His Wild Ways Michael Owens Retrieved 27 August 2018 Gleadell Colin 21 March 2012 How Damien Hirst tried to transform the art market The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2018 a b Burn Gordon Hirst Damien 2001 On the Way to Work Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0571202577 Swimming With Famous Dead Sharks The New York Times 1 October 2006 Retrieved 23 February 2017 The Art Newspaper The Art Newspaper Archived from the original on 20 August 2006 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Dallas News Dallas News 2 October 2006 Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Laplaca on Artnet com 18 October 2004 Retrieved 15 August 2010 The Quay restaurant damienhirst com Retrieved 4 May 2016 Damien Hirst designs restaurant for Newport Street Gallery Dezeen 18 February 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Hands up for Hirst The Economist 11 September 2010 2009 Rich List search The Times Retrieved 22 March 2010 Top 10 Richest Painters Net Worth Mashtos Retrieved 23 June 2019 Tate Pharmacy Damien Hirst 1992 Tate Tate Etc Retrieved 23 February 2017 Berlin Staatliche Museen zu Staatliche Museen zu Berlin Home spk berlin de Archived from the original on 16 August 2000 Retrieved 23 February 2017 1014 DAMIEN HIRST b 1966 Beautiful Axe Slash Lot 1014 liveauctioneers com Retrieved 23 February 2017 Damien Hirst Virgin Mother 22 February 2017 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Priceless Art s great disasters The Independent 31 July 2008 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Cleaner clears up Hirst s ashtray art The Guardian London 19 October 2001 Retrieved 19 October 2001 Ltd Science The Dream Damien Hirst damienhirst com Retrieved 23 February 2017 Gerlis Melanie 16 March 2016 Damien Hirst suffragette spins with a twist The Art Newspaper Umberto Allemandi Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 29 March 2016 Banksy donates new artwork honoring health care workers to hospital CNN Births England and Wales 1984 2006 Findmypast com Archived from the original on 12 November 2006 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Damien Hirst devastated after breakdown of 20 year relationship with partner The Telegraph 10 June 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2015 Kate Bernard 6 August 2006 Kate Bernard talks to Maia Norman Damien Hirst s other half The Observer London Retrieved 15 August 2010 Leith William Avoiding the Sharks Life The Observer Magazine p 15 14 February 1999 Ronnie Wood taken to rehab by Damien Hirst The Independent 7 September 2011 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Right Livelihood Award 1989 Rightlivelihood org Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Damien Hirst donates Beautiful Love Survival Survival International 15 September 2008 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Sotheby s Auctions Calendar Damien Hirst Beautiful Inside My Head Forever Evening Sale Sotheby s Retrieved 15 August 2010 We Are One a celebration of tribal peoples published this autumn Survival International 16 October 2009 Retrieved 25 November 2009 We Are One Survival International Retrieved 15 August 2010 Art on a Postcard Object object You could potentially acquire a postcard sized artwork by a famous artist at this secret auction in London Lonely Planet Retrieved 2 November 2019 Damien Hirst s NFT Initiative Which Asks Buyers to Choose Between a Digital Token and IRL Art Has Already Generated 25 Million news artnet com 25 August 2021 Halisia Hubbard 12 October 2022 Damien Hirst just burned 1 000 of his paintings and will soon burn thousands more NPR Steven McIntosh 11 October 2022 Damien Hirst burns his own art after selling NFTs BBC Further reading EditBlanche Ulrich 2018 Damien Hirst Gallery Art in a Material World Baden Baden DEU Tectum Verlag ISBN 978 3 8288 4030 0 Pogrebin Robin 21 February 2017 Damien Hirst Alienated Collectors Will His New Work Win Them Back The New York Times Retrieved 22 February 2017 Blanche Ulrich 2014 Konsumkunst Kultur und Kommerz bei Banksy und Damien Hirst in German Bielefeld DEU transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3839421390 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Thompson Don 2012 The 12 Million Stuffed Shark The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art New York NY St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0230341937 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Benhamou Huet Judith 2012 Les artistes ont toujours aime l argent De Durer a Damien Hirst in French Paris FRA Grasset ISBN 978 2246800002 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Tomkins Calvin 2010 Lives of the Artists Portraits of Ten Artists Whose Work and Lifestyles Embody the Future of Contemporary Art New York NY Henry Holt and Co ISBN 978 1429946414 Retrieved 22 February 2017 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Damien Hirst Wikimedia Commons has media related to Damien Hirst Official Damien Hirst Website Archived 20 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Damien Hirst s Pharmacy on Tate interactive site Damien Hirst at Gow Langsford Gallery Auckland New Zealand September 2011 Damien Hirst Retrospective at Tate Modern London UK Video Damien Hirst Retrospective at Tate Modern London 2012 Retrieved from https en 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