#DamienHirst
[2023-08-06 19:57:50]
Damien Hirst got the public's recognition for the first time when studying at the Goldsmiths College in London in 1988. Group exhibition of works. Hearst has been one of the most outstanding artists of his generation for nearly a quarter of a century. Symbolic sharks suspended to formeldahyde, the physical impossibility of death in life's heart (1991), platinum casting on the human skull using 8,601 perfect diamonds, (2007) Hurst takes a direct and challenging approach to the idea of being. In the latter, art historian Rudy Fuchs once said as follows. "The skull leaves the world and is almost a celestial body, at the same time it represents the cruelty of death, compared to the tears of Banitas scene, the skull of diamonds is glory itself." His work is a desire, fear, raw And doubt our consciousness and belief in the boundary between death, reason and faith, and love and hatred. Hurst uses scientific and religious tools and images to create sculptures and paintings and its beauty and strength provides viewers with insight into the art beyond the well-known understanding of these disciplines . "There are four important things in life, religion, love, art and science," the artist said. "In the best case they are just tools to help you find the way to darkness, none of them works, but they help ... In all of this, science seems to be present. Just like religion, it provides flicker of hope, maybe it will eventually get better ... "
Damien Hirst was born in Bristol, England in 1965. Hearst participated in an exhibition of young British artists held at the Search Gallery in London in 1992 and received the Turner Prize in 1995. Solo exhibitions include "Pain and Ecstasy", the National Archaeological Museum of Naples (2004), the Boston Museum of Art (2005), and Astrup Fearnley (Oslo) (2005). "Life for God", Amsterdam Museum of Art (2008); "Requiem", Pinchuk ArtCentre, Kiev (2009), "Lifetime, Death, Love", Prague Galerie Rudolfinum (2009); Love, "London Wallace Collection, 2009-10 "," The Cornucopia ", Monaco Maritime Museum in Monte Carlo, 2010," For the Love of God ", Palazzo Museum in Florence, 2010. Damien Hirst: Retrospective, "Last Supper", Retrospective, "Tate Modern, London (2012);" Relics ", Qatar Museum Authority, Al Riwaq Gallery, Doha (2013-14); Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo (2015) Washington DC National Museum of Art (2016), and "incredible treasure of shipwreck" Palazzo Grassi and Punta della Dogana, Venice (2017)