Damien Hirst Bristol, UK, b. 1965

  • Damien Hirst © Photo Nathanael Turner for The New York Times
  • “I just wanted to find out where the boundaries were. So far I’ve found there aren’t any. I just wanted to be stopped, and no one will stop me.”
    – Damien Hirst

     

    Lives in Devon (UK), works in London, Gloucester and Devon

     

     

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    A leading figure of the Young British Artists (YBA) movement, Damien Hirst has played a central role in shaping the discourse of contemporary art since the early 1990s. His practice examines life, death, belief, science, religion, and consumer culture through works that combine conceptual precision with strong visual impact. Hirst’s art operates at the intersection of attraction and unease, confronting viewers with fundamental questions of existence while challenging conventional expectations of what art can be.

     

    Mortality occupies a defining position within Hirst’s work. The fear of death, which the artist has identified as the central idea of his practice, underpins his sustained engagement with themes of impermanence, preservation, and belief. His works often adopt the visual language of scientific display and institutional authority, transforming methods of classification and preservation into metaphors for humanity’s attempt to control the uncontrollable.

     

    Born in Bristol and raised in Leeds, Hirst moved to London in 1986 to study at Goldsmiths College. In 1988, while still a student, he curated the exhibition Freeze, an event that introduced a new generation of British artists and marked a decisive moment in the formation of the YBA movement. The exhibition established new models of self-organization, visibility, and artistic authorship that would become characteristic of the period.

     

    Public recognition followed in the early 1990s. In 1991, Hirst created The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, featuring a tiger shark preserved in formaldehyde. First exhibited in 1992, the work confronted audiences with death as a physical presence rather than an abstract concept. This approach became central to the Natural History series, in which animals preserved in formaldehyde are presented with the detached clarity of scientific specimens.

    In 1995, Hirst was awarded the Turner Prize for Mother and Child (Divided) (1993), shown at the Venice Biennale. In 1997, his participation in Sensation at the Royal Academy of Arts further established his position as one of the most controversial and visible artists of his generation.

    Painting has remained a significant component of Hirst’s practice. The Spot Paintings, initiated in the late 1980s, consist of multicoloured dots arranged in precise grids. Their apparent order is undermined by the deliberate avoidance of colour repetition, producing a subtle sense of instability beneath the surface.

     

    “The Spot Paintings always look happy, although there’s an unease there too because the colours don’t repeat when you expect them to.”
    – Damien Hirst

    Butterflies occupy a central symbolic role in Hirst’s work. The exhibition In and Out of Love (1991) incorporated live butterflies emerging and dying within the gallery space, making the life cycle an integral part of the artwork. In the later Kaleidoscope Paintings, thousands of butterfly wings are arranged into symmetrical compositions reminiscent of stained glass and mandalas. These works combine visual beauty with an acute awareness of fragility and impermanence.

     

    Chance and mechanical process are explored in the Spin Paintings, produced by pouring household paint onto a rotating canvas. The method reduces direct artistic control and introduces unpredictability, referencing both action painting and the conceptual legacy of the readymade.

     

    Medicine and pharmacology form another sustained focus within Hirst’s work. The Medicine Cabinets and Instrument Cabinets present pharmaceuticals and surgical tools arranged with clinical precision. These works reflect society’s trust in science and medical authority while acknowledging their limits. As Hirst has observed, such works can be read simultaneously as reflections on power structures, belief systems, consumer culture, and the human body.

     

    In 2007, Hirst presented For the Love of God, a platinum cast of a human skull encrusted with 8,601 diamonds. The work became one of the most resonant and expensive artistic gestures of its time, attracting attention far beyond the professional art world. By combining the motif of memento mori with demonstrative luxury and an aesthetics of excess, Hirst called into question the boundaries of artistic value and the relationship between art, the market, and consumer culture within a media-saturated contemporary landscape.

     

    "You have to find universal triggers. Everyone’s afraid of glass, everyone’s frightened of sharks. Everyone loves butterflies."

    – Damien Hirst


    Over three decades, Hirst has developed a body of work spanning installation, painting, and sculpture, contributing to a reassessment of the role of the artist within contemporary cultural and institutional frameworks.

     

    Works by Damien Hirst are held in major public collections worldwide, including:

    Tate, London, United Kingdom
    The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, USA
    Centre Pompidou, Paris, France
    Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
    Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
    Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain
    Fondazione Prada, Milan, Italy
    The Broad, Los Angeles, USA
    Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
    Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, USA
    Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, USA
    Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, USA
    Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, USA
    National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Australia
    Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, Germany
    Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany

  • Works
    • Damien Hirst, Azocarmine B, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      Azocarmine B, 2008
      Household gloss on canvas (spot size twenty-four inches)
      182,9 × 182,9 cm
    • Damien Hirst, Beautiful love kids co twenty-five to ten painting with beautiful butterflies, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      Beautiful love kids co twenty-five to ten painting with beautiful butterflies, 2008
      Butterflies and household gloss on canvas in artist’s frame
      237,5 × 237,5 × 16 cm
    • Damien Hirst, Beautiful Muruga Paranoia Intense Painting With Extra Inner Beauty, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      Beautiful Muruga Paranoia Intense Painting With Extra Inner Beauty, 2008
      Household gloss on canvas
      152,4 × 152,4 cm
    • Damien Hirst, For the love of god, laugh, 2007
      Damien Hirst
      For the love of god, laugh, 2007
      Silkscreen print with glazes and diamond dust on paper
      100 × 75 cm
    • Damien Hirst, Something must break, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      Something must break, 2008
      Plexiglass and suture equipment
      180 × 92 × 36 cm
    • Damien Hirst, Tetrachloroauric acid, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      Tetrachloroauric acid, 2008
      Household gloss and enamel paint on canvas
      175,3 × 271,8 cm
    • Damien Hirst, The Rose Window, Durham Cathedral, 2008
      Damien Hirst
      The Rose Window, Durham Cathedral, 2008
      Butterflies and metallic paint on canvas in artist’s frame
      299,2 × 299,2 × 15 cm
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