Home
About Us
Latest News
Contact Us
Agius, Lorenzo
Brinkworth , Kate
de Kristo, Bela
Loiseau, Gustave
Marc , Robert
Martin, Henri
McDermott, Dan
Quizet, Alphonse
Terzian, Georges
Venard, Claude
19th Century
Contemporary
Expressionist
Fauvist
Impressionist
Modern British
Modernist
Pop Art
Post Impressionist
Sculpture
Surrealist
Victorian Art
Recently Sold
Abel-Truchet, Louis
Adrion, Lucien
Agar, Eileen
Agius, Lorenzo
Argov, Michael
Arman, Pierre
Auglay, Auguste
Baumgartner, Karl
Becker-Leber, Hans Josef
Benn, Ben
Beraud, Jean
Berkes, Antal
Bigas, Eduard
Boggs, Frank Myers
Boldini, Giovanni
Brangwyn, Frank
Breuer-Weil, David
Brianchon, Maurice
Brinkworth , Kate
Bronzes,
Burgess, Andy
Canu, Yvonne
Capeinick, Jean
Carlini, Anto
Caro-Delvaille , Henry
Carrier-Belleuse, Pierre
Cavailles, Jules
Chabas, Maurice
Charreton, Victor
Chiparus, Demeter H
Colle, Michel Auguste
Dali, Salvador
de Kristo, Bela
de Vlaminck, Maurice
Degas, Edgar
Delpy, Hippolyte-Camille
Dong Yoo, Kim
Dufy, Jean
Dufy, Raoul
Dupré, Julien
Enjolras, Delphin
Falero, Luis Ricardo
Fisher, Wendy
Forain, Jean-Louis
Fox, Ivor
Gardet, Georges
Gauguin, Paul
Gérôme, Jean-Léon
Gleizes, Albert
Goeneutte, Norbert
Guillaumin, Armand
Hayter, Stanley William
Helholz-Or, Menachem
Helleu, Paul-César
Hirst, Damien
Kadishman, Menashe
Kennedy, Cecil
Kim, Sung Jin
Klein, Yves
Kossoff, Leon
La Touche, Gaston
Lanskoy, Andre
Lapicque, Charles
Le Sidaner, Henri
Lebasque, Henri
Lenoir, Marcel
Leroux , Jules Marie Auguste
Levis, Maurice
Loiseau, Gustave
Lowry, Lawrence Stephen
Loxton Peacock, Clarisse
Luce, Maximilien
Malfroy, Henry
Mane-Katz, Emmanuel
Marc , Robert
Marquet, Albert
Martin, Henri
Martin-Ferrières, Jacques
Matisse, Henri
Maufra, Maxime
McDermott, Dan
Meissonier, Jean-Louis-Ernest
Minaux, Andre
Modigliani, Amadeo
Monet, Claude
Mostyn, Tom
Onslow Ford, Rudolph
Oppenheimer, Joseph
Pedersen, Finn
Perre, Danielle
Picabia, Francis
Pissarro, Camille
Prunier , Gaston
Quittner, Rudolf
Quizet, Alphonse
Reggianini, Vittorio
Renoir, Pierre - Auguste
Schecroun, Jean-Pierre
Shashou , Sandra
Sisley, Alfred
Smet, Leon de
Souverbie, Jean
Speller, Michael
Stella, Frank
Stern, Bert
Stevens, Alfred
Storck, Roméo
Terzian, Georges
Thaulow, Frits
Thibesart, Raymond
Thorburn, Will
Tournes, Etienne
Valensi , Henry
van Dongen, Kees
Velten, Wilhelm
Venard, Claude
Vlaminck, Maurice de
Warhol, Andy
Wexler, Jacob
Yvaral, Jean Pierre
Zandomeneghi, Federico
Page visits: 0
Total visits: 549204
Damien Hirst
b. 1965, British
See the art by this Artist »
Born in 1965 in Bristol, Hirst grew up in Leeds and subsequently went to Goldsmith's College in London. Between 1988 and 1990 he curated a series of exhibitions of work by his contemporaries including the highly acclaimed group shows Freeze, Modern Medicine and Gambler.

In his own work Hirst has continually challenged the boundaries between art, science, the media and popular culture. A 12-foot tiger shark, a cow and her calf sawn in two, pharmaceutical bottles, house paint flung onto spinning canvases, spot paintings, cigarette butts, medicine cabinets, office furniture, medical instruments, butterflies and tropical fish are just some of the means Hirst employs to communicate his unflinching view of the ambiguity at the heart of human experience. Hirst has said 'I am going to die and I want to live forever. I can't escape the fact, and I can't let go of the desire.'

Whilst best known for the 'Natural History' works that present animals suspended in formaldehyde, Hirst has also presented works that attest to the transience of biological existence. An early work 'In and Out of Love' (1991) focuses on a butterfly's brief life-span from hatching to decay, whilst 'A Thousand Years' (1990) consists of a rotting cow's head, sugar solution, fly eggs and a fly zapper - a veritable momento mori in the 'Vanitas' tradition. In many of Hirst's works the glass vitrine functions as both window and barrier, seducing the viewer into the work visually whilst providing a minimalist geometry to rigorously frame, contain and objectify the subject, thus avoiding sentimental expressionism. It is a way of getting the viewer to think about things they may not wish to think about. Hirst makes iconoclastic works recasting the fundamental questions concerning the meaning of life, the existence of god and death as the final limit, in paradoxically the most factual and unorthodox way.

In many of the sculptures of the 1990s such as 'The Acquired Inability to Escape' (1991) and 'The Asthmatic Escaped' (1992) a human presence was implied through the inclusion of 'relic' like objects in the works; clothes, cigarettes, ashtrays, tables, chairs, a Ventolin inhaler. That implied presence has become explicit in works such as 'Ways of Seeing' (2000), a vitrine sculpture that presents the figure of a laboratory technician seated at a desk heightening the sense of being trapped and of being reduced to a single function: an eye looking through a microscope. The more celebratory work 'Hymn' (2000), a polychrome bronze sculpture, reveals the anatomical musculature and internal organs of the human body on a monumental scale.

Hirst has had exhibitions in galleries and museums throughout the world. He received the DAAD fellowship in Berlin in 1994 and the Turner Prize in 1995.
We do not currently have items for this particular artist, please contact us regarding acquisition.
Back to the top of the page »