Gagosian

Damien Hirst

15 Sep - 28 Oct 2006

DAMIEN HIRST
CORPUS: DRAWINGS 1981 - 2006
Sep 15 - Oct 28, 2006

980 Madison Avenue

Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce a retrospective exhibition of the drawings of Damien Hirst. More than two hundred drawings from 1981 to 2006 offer historical insight into rarely seen aspects of the artist's work and process. Included are early drawings from Hirst's student days; pencil sketches for seminal sculptures such as The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living (1991), A Thousand Years (1991), The Acquired Inability to Escape (1992), Away from the Flock (1994) and The Hat Makes the Man (2003); preparatory diagrams for early spot paintings and medicine cabinets; a large-scale series of fourteen drawings for The Stations of the Cross (2004); and proposals for unrealized and future projects.

Hirst plays out his ideas through image as well as text with the urgency and immediacy of a child whose irrepressible, exhaustive imagination is engaged in a constant, passionate pursuit to describe, demarcate, question, invent, discover and even divine. In Can't See the Wood for the Trees (1996), he gives poetic insight into the conceptual basis of his drawings, chronicling their importance in the developmental process of his work, "constructing spaces, drawings for sculptures, ideas become reality, making spaces, ideas made real, in search of reality, looking for Mr. Goodsex, nothing is a problem for me, he tried to internalize everything, from head to paper."

Through the drawings, "we can explore his preoccupations and passions which centre on the ambiguity at the heart of human experience," as described in Hirst's catalogue From the Cradle to the Grave, "the confusing relations between art and life, life and death and image and reality, change and stasis, communion and isolation, entrapment and escape, love and relationships." The corpus, or body of work contained in this exhibition reveals the breadth and depth of thought at the heart of Hirst's creative output.

A fully illustrated catalogue to accompany the exhibition features a conversation between the artist and philosopher John Gray (author of Straw Dogs, False Dawn, and Al Qaeda and What It Means to Be Modern) and an essay by British historian Simon Baker.

Damien Hirst was born in Bristol, England in 1965 and attended Goldsmiths College. In 1989, he curated Freeze, a benchmark exhibition for British art, and was awarded the Turner Prize in 1995. A survey of works from 1989-2004 was recently held at the Museo Nazionale Archaeologico di Napoli (2005). His monumental sculpture, The Virgin Mother, is currently on view at the Royal Academy, London.

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