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Damien Hirst “End of An Era” Exhibition

Read about Damien Hirst “End of An Era” Exhibition on SLAMXHYPE.


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Opening January 30th, 2010 and running through the 6th of March, 2010. Damien Hirst brings a new collection of works to NYC’s Gagosian Gallery. The show looks back over an iconic era of the London based artist, and features some of his most memorable pieces.

Gagosian Gallery has a busy month in January, playing host to Ed Ruscha, and Aaron Young before Hirst arrives in town, its a pretty amazing start to 2010, and a pretty good reason to make sure you’re in NYC for the month.

Damien Hirst was born in Bristol, England in 1965. While still a student at Goldsmith’s College in 1988, he curated the now renowned student exhibition, Freeze, held in east London. In this exhibition, Hirst brought together a group of young artists who would come to define cutting-edge contemporary art in the 1990s. In 1991, he had his first solo exhibition at the Woodstock Street Gallery, entitled In and Out of Love, in which he filled the gallery with hundreds of live tropical butterflies, some of which were hatched from the monochrome canvases that hung the walls. In 1992, he was part of the ground breaking Young British Artists exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery. In this show, he exhibited his now famous Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, a tiger shark in a glass tank of formaldehyde. That same year he was nominated for the prestigious Tate Gallery Turner Prize, and later won that coveted award in 1995.

Hirst’s best known works are his paintings, medicine cabinet sculptures, and glass tank installations. For the most part, his paintings have taken on two styles. One is an arrangement of color spots with titles that refer to pharmaceutical chemicals, known as Spot paintings. The second, his Spin paintings, are created by centrifugal force, when Hirst places his canvases on a spinner, and pours the paint as they spin. In the medicine cabinet pieces Hirst redefines sculpture with his arrangements of various drugs, surgical tools, and medical supplies. His tank pieces, which contain dead animals, that are preserved in formaldehyde, are another kind of sculpture and directly address the inevitable mortality of all living beings. All of Hirst’s works contain his ironic wit, and question art’s role in contemporary culture.

Hirst’s first exhibition with Gagosian Gallery, entitled No Sense of Absolute Corruption, was in 1996 at the now-closed SoHo location in New York. Superstition was Damien Hirst’s first show at the Beverly Hills space.



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