On Saturday I went to
see the Damien Hirst retrospective at Tate Modern. This year seems to have been
a big one for art, and not solely as I work at a gallery and swim in Titian,
Munch and new commissions and acquisitions but more cause Hockney happened and
everyone got all excited and Joey Barton tweeted about going to galleries on
his days off.
I had not been fussed
about the Damien Hirst, I saw a guy on Channel 4 News with a Gin &
Tonic live from Inverness in the April sunshine selling the 'it’s not art' line
quite well, whilst the studio pundit did a rather shit job of defending Hirst’s
status. Plenty of people have been to see it but wasn’t until a colleague
recently recommended it (and was genuinely surprised at my disdain) that I
decided maybe it was an opportunity to really decide, for myself, first hand,
where I stand on Damien Hirst.
The exhibition got
itself off to a good start without Hirst’s help but as my companions, two
school friends, are some of my favourites to wander round galleries with. The
first thing to hit us was young Hirst in Dead Head – the smirking art
student pulls his head up to a severed head in an anatomy lab. It becomes increasingly obvious why this work opens the exhibition,
more so than the Dead Cow Head In A Box (labeled by the artist as A Thousand
Years) Dead Head expresses in an instant, the devilish look in
Hirst’s eye, the cheek and the scandal, this is a man obsessed with the path
through life, and the world after death. Not what happens after death, but how
the human processes it and how we play with it in the world around us. Let's be
honest, he's hardly the first artist to be intrigued by death and anatomy.
From the pocket of
stagnant air seeping out of A Thousand Years – through to the life cycle
of In And Out Of Love, (the butterfly room) on past the huge microscope
slides like slices of whole cow cracked in two, complete with embryotic sac and
calve deep inside – seeing Hirst’s work as a whole changes things. It’s no
longer the wanker with the shark in a tank, 'or god, I painted dots on my
bedroom wall at 15' (I did – I’m that much of a wanker myself, mine are more Sol LeWitt than Hirst mind, and I'd never seen either) but you see a
fastidious obsession with form and continuation. My favourite work took me by
surprise, Lullaby The Seasons, at first look a glittering series of
display cabinets lined with various ‘every day’ pills on their long mirrored
shelves, each of the four cabinets has a different colour scheme, and glancing
at the name makes the obvious blatant. Pills for the seasons; pulling your year
along one swig and swallow at a time.
Rachel and I chatted
on the tube hours later about whether Hirst was more valid than Miro - recently
on in the same space in Tate Modern. In the exhibition I found myself unsure as
we walked round whether I could compare Munch and Hirst; both men’s work is defined by deeply personal preoccupations. I’m
still not sure, but I do know as we looked round we ripped at ideas and were repulsed or intrigued with different works – so I’d say,
although no Damien I don’t want to spend £1,800 on a poster in the shop the
curator definitely
wins – this is an exhibition. Like wandering through Hirst's mind, it
is most definitely art to make such a performance of your inner ponders and
curiosities.
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