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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 27

Damien Hirst

Schätzpreis
600.000 £ - 800.000 £
ca. 783.914 $ - 1.045.218 $
Zuschlagspreis:
729.000 £
ca. 952.455 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 27

Damien Hirst

Schätzpreis
600.000 £ - 800.000 £
ca. 783.914 $ - 1.045.218 $
Zuschlagspreis:
729.000 £
ca. 952.455 $
Beschreibung:

Damien Hirst Follow Sad Steps - Life Fulfilled signed, titled and dated ‘Damien Hirst “Life Fulfilled” 2006’ on the reverse butterflies and household gloss on canvas, in artist's frame 227.6 x 122 cm (89 5/8 x 48 in.) Executed in 2006.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles Phillips de Pury & Company, London, 10 October 2012, lot 19 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Los Angeles, Gagosian Gallery, Damien Hirst Superstition , 22 February - 5 April 2007, pp. 100-101 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Monumental and glowing in its tonal transparency, Damien Hirst’s Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled envelops the viewer with a grand veil of butterfly wings. Exuding an endlessly seductive atmosphere of ephemeral beauty, Hirst continuously raises questions about the nature of existence. The relationship between life and death has been a central theme throughout Hirst’s controversial and varied artistic career, recurring in provocative works such as The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living , 1991. Echoing the design and form of stained glass windows found in religious architecture, Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled the viewer with a secular comparison, one that deftly intertwines religion and mortality. Aesthetically mirroring stained glass windows, the present work, with its intensity of colour, subverts the window’s traditional function. Instead of allowing one to look through it, the work encourages reflection, acting as a visual metaphor for our own lives. Art becomes the means through which the viewers’ eyes may act as windows to the soul. The medium of stained glass is deeply rooted within the tradition of art history, from Gothic cathedrals, through the Bauhaus stained glass workshops to contemporary renderings, such as Gerhard Richter’s Cologne cathedral window and the more dissident work of Wim Delvoye The present work exquisitely redefines the relationship between art and religion. Commenting on this relationship, the artist asserts, ‘ There’s a hole there in people. In everybody. In me. A hole that needs filling, and religion fills it for some people. And art for others. I don’t think religion is the answer, but it helps. I use art in a similar way to fill that hole. It’s just ways of looking at the world optimistically rather than just as a brutal swamp’ (Damien Hirst quoted in Damien Hirst New Religion , London, 2006, p. 12). Hirst’s macabre incorporation of butterfly wings is not wholly melancholic: ‘I think I’ve got an obsession with death, but I think it’s like a celebration of life rather than something morbid. You can’t have one without the other’ (Damien Hirst On the Way to Work , London, 2001, p. 21). The artist's exploration of mortality through the use of butterflies can be traced back to his 1991 exhibition, 'In and Out of Love'. The exhibition contained both live butterflies emerging from canvas-attached pupae, and monochrome gloss paintings in which dead butterflies had been fixed. Obsessively returning to questions of existence and mortality, Hirst provides a complex vision of death. In choosing to incorporate only the beautiful wings, Hirst evokes beauty through mortality. Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled focuses upon an idealised beauty separating our concept of the butterfly from the real thing. Hirst’s dead butterflies are a reminder that life necessitates physical change; the butterfly wings can only remain beautiful when detached from the mortal body of the insect. Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled belongs to Hirst’s Butterfly Grid series. Titled after Philip Larkin’s poem ‘Sad Steps’ from his collection ‘High Windows’, the work shares Larkin’s poetical interlacing of the beautiful with the ugly. Just as the spectator is confronted by the exquisitely kaleidoscopic arrangement of so many butterflies, the underlying reality of the artwork's medium also becomes apparent. Exploring ephemerality, the lyrical arrangement of Hirst’s butterflies adopts a poetry of its own through this carefully constructed artistic vocabulary. The butterfly is foregrounded due to its loaded symbolic connotations. Symbolising the soul, the butterfly is representative of the Ancient Greek goddess Psyche, as well as representing resurrecti

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 27
Auktion:
Datum:
06.10.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Damien Hirst Follow Sad Steps - Life Fulfilled signed, titled and dated ‘Damien Hirst “Life Fulfilled” 2006’ on the reverse butterflies and household gloss on canvas, in artist's frame 227.6 x 122 cm (89 5/8 x 48 in.) Executed in 2006.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles Phillips de Pury & Company, London, 10 October 2012, lot 19 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Los Angeles, Gagosian Gallery, Damien Hirst Superstition , 22 February - 5 April 2007, pp. 100-101 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Monumental and glowing in its tonal transparency, Damien Hirst’s Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled envelops the viewer with a grand veil of butterfly wings. Exuding an endlessly seductive atmosphere of ephemeral beauty, Hirst continuously raises questions about the nature of existence. The relationship between life and death has been a central theme throughout Hirst’s controversial and varied artistic career, recurring in provocative works such as The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living , 1991. Echoing the design and form of stained glass windows found in religious architecture, Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled the viewer with a secular comparison, one that deftly intertwines religion and mortality. Aesthetically mirroring stained glass windows, the present work, with its intensity of colour, subverts the window’s traditional function. Instead of allowing one to look through it, the work encourages reflection, acting as a visual metaphor for our own lives. Art becomes the means through which the viewers’ eyes may act as windows to the soul. The medium of stained glass is deeply rooted within the tradition of art history, from Gothic cathedrals, through the Bauhaus stained glass workshops to contemporary renderings, such as Gerhard Richter’s Cologne cathedral window and the more dissident work of Wim Delvoye The present work exquisitely redefines the relationship between art and religion. Commenting on this relationship, the artist asserts, ‘ There’s a hole there in people. In everybody. In me. A hole that needs filling, and religion fills it for some people. And art for others. I don’t think religion is the answer, but it helps. I use art in a similar way to fill that hole. It’s just ways of looking at the world optimistically rather than just as a brutal swamp’ (Damien Hirst quoted in Damien Hirst New Religion , London, 2006, p. 12). Hirst’s macabre incorporation of butterfly wings is not wholly melancholic: ‘I think I’ve got an obsession with death, but I think it’s like a celebration of life rather than something morbid. You can’t have one without the other’ (Damien Hirst On the Way to Work , London, 2001, p. 21). The artist's exploration of mortality through the use of butterflies can be traced back to his 1991 exhibition, 'In and Out of Love'. The exhibition contained both live butterflies emerging from canvas-attached pupae, and monochrome gloss paintings in which dead butterflies had been fixed. Obsessively returning to questions of existence and mortality, Hirst provides a complex vision of death. In choosing to incorporate only the beautiful wings, Hirst evokes beauty through mortality. Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled focuses upon an idealised beauty separating our concept of the butterfly from the real thing. Hirst’s dead butterflies are a reminder that life necessitates physical change; the butterfly wings can only remain beautiful when detached from the mortal body of the insect. Sad Steps – Life Fulfilled belongs to Hirst’s Butterfly Grid series. Titled after Philip Larkin’s poem ‘Sad Steps’ from his collection ‘High Windows’, the work shares Larkin’s poetical interlacing of the beautiful with the ugly. Just as the spectator is confronted by the exquisitely kaleidoscopic arrangement of so many butterflies, the underlying reality of the artwork's medium also becomes apparent. Exploring ephemerality, the lyrical arrangement of Hirst’s butterflies adopts a poetry of its own through this carefully constructed artistic vocabulary. The butterfly is foregrounded due to its loaded symbolic connotations. Symbolising the soul, the butterfly is representative of the Ancient Greek goddess Psyche, as well as representing resurrecti

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 27
Auktion:
Datum:
06.10.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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