Damien Hirst - the Andy Warhol of our generation
It has been said that Damien Hirst is the Andy Warhol of our generation. As the celebrated bad-boy artist of our time, Hirst carries on the legacy of Warhol with sensation-seeking, factory-made work that is as much about the marketing as it is about content.
Certainly last year’s exhibition at the White Cube gallery in London, Beyond Belief caused international headlines with the sale of the artist’s most notorious work - a glittering pave diamond skull aptly titled, For the Love of God (2007) that fetched a staggering £50 million (over $100 million), the most expensive piece of art ever made! An interesting sidebar – the reported cost of making the piece (executed by London Jewelers Bently and Skinner) out of 8,500 flawless diamonds encrusted into a platinum cast of a human skull was apparently around $20 million. What makes up the difference is the premium brand name of the artist and the idea.
The idea of the juxtaposing diamonds – exemplifying permanence (”diamonds are forever”) and a skull – a traditional momento mori (“Remember that you will die”) puts a new “luxury goods spin” on
the old-fashioned still life painting style called Vanitas, made popular by Baroque artists of the 16th century! Vanitas, Latin for “emptiness” refers to the meaninglessness of earthly life and the futility of pleasure. In traditional Vanitas paintings, skulls were used along with a sumptuous arrangement of fruit and flowers and occasionally an assortment of dead game animals. Look closely and you see that some of the luscious fruits are rotting, and flies are crawling on the table.
When we recall an early work of Hirst that initially brought him
to the attention of the public and power collector Charles Saatchi – a dead shark floating in a tank of formaldehyde (now on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York) – it is apparent that Hirst has been brilliant in finding a strategy of reinvigorating thread-bare ideas of art-making (with a dash of irony) for some time. But not only does Hirst reinvent old ideas - like Warhol, he replicates them, creating a signature or “brand.”
Hirst’s latest “branded” idea – diamond skull
silkscreens – recall Warhol’s diamond dust shoe paintings and prints as well as Warhol’s skulls. Warhol’s shoe becomes Hirst’s skull, floating across a celestial void of sparkling black background. Hirst’s diamond skull silkscreens, in editions of 250, were selling at a fast clip at the Miami-Basel art fair for £10,000 ($20,000) each!
Hirst is laughing all the way to the bank. A few years ago, he
starting buying up fake Picasso prints on ebay and signing them, thus making them into real Hirsts with monetary value just by virtue of his signature. A parallel could be drawn with Warhol, who started “making money” literally – by painting dollar signs on canvases and prints which he sold for money!
To be continued…






March 22nd, 2008 at 4:00 pm
This may well be the finest, most inciteful analysis I have ever read!
March 24th, 2008 at 6:39 pm
i’ve seen pictures of the diamond encrusted skulls, pretty kool.
one comment on “value by signature”
There’s a great Picasso anecdote, too good not to be true.
Little old lady brings painting to Picasso, it turns out to be a forgery.
He paints in big strokes on it, “this is NOT a genuine Picasso”…
worthless forgery now has valuable Picasso signature!
March 25th, 2008 at 7:30 am
Remarkable historical perspective and analysis of this blossoming artist tycoon as a thread in the overall tapestry time line of art. Most insightful, informative, eye-opening, yet wince producing. Thank you, folks!
March 26th, 2008 at 10:41 am
Sir Nose D’void recounts a cute, but inaccurate fable! It happened to have been an original Renoir painting to which I added my comment that it was not, indeed, MY genuine work.
Thus, the actual dilemma which ensued was whether the painting was an original, defaced and worthless Renoir or a transformed and new Picasso original.
At the time, I had done all I could with bicycle seats and handlebars and felt the creative need to move to another medium. Like the bull, I believe the transformed canvas to be an original work of MINE. Thank you for the opportunity to reclaim my dignity and potentially raise an auction price.