Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Damien Hirst Relics Exhibition

I had been putting off a visit to the Relics Exhibition by Damien Hirst out of fear that it would make my stomach turn and it would be disgusting to look at. But on the very last day I took the step and went on my own. I knew I should not miss it.

Damien Hirst is the UK's richest living artist. Death is a central theme in his works. 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. While he probably errs on the side of glass half empty I was throughly fascinated with his work from a scientific point of view (a microbiology background I guess) and the amount of bling on display in the form of diamond encrusted human skulls. 

I was so taken by the enormity of the sharks that I rushed back after school with Owen and Erin so they could take a look. Owen kept snapping away on his leap pad and was blown away but lots of displays. Erin wasn't keen on the cows head being separate from the cow though.





















A dove suspended in formalydehyde




Circular display of butterfly wings


A basking shark in formaldehyde























Damien with a human head























Owen taking a picture of a circular board with dead flies glued to it