Work on Beautiful Inside My Head Forever – a major auction of
new works by Damien Hirst - has progressed and the full scope of this
ground-breaking auction can now be revealed.
Including a whole new body of work that covers the complete
range of Hirst's output and more, the auction will run over two days,
commencing with an Evening Sale on Monday Monday, 15 September 5 September, and
continuing throughout the following day (Tuesday, 16 September September) with
a morning and afternoon session. The two day sale, which will include 223 lots,
is expected to realise a sum in excess of £65 million. Estimates will range
from around £15,000-20,000 (for a range of new drawings) up to the
£8,000,000-12,000,000 estimate attached to The Golden Calf – the monumental and
arresting centre-piece of the sale. Among the works to be offered will be new
and exciting variations on many of the key themes that have defined Hirst's work to date.
The Golden Calf (lot 13)
calf, 18 carat gold,
glass, gold plated steel, silicone and formaldehyde solution with Carrara
marble plinth (398.9 by 350.5 by 167.6cm) executed in 2008 will carry an
estimate of £ 8,000,000-12,000,000 €
10,120,000-15,180,000 US$ 15,800,000-23,690,000
The Kingdom (lot 5) vening tiger shark,
glass, steel, silicone and formaldehyde solution with steel plinth (214 by 383.6 by
141.8cm.) executed in 2008 has been estimated between £ 4,000,000 and 6,000,000
(€ 5,060,000-7,590,000, US$ 7,900,000-11,850,000)
The Dream (lot 110) foal, glass,
steel, resin, silicone and formaldehyde solution (231 by 332.6 by
138.1cm)executed in 2008 and The Incredible Journey (lot 211) zebra, glass,
steel, silicone, and formaldehyde solution (208.6 by 322.5 by 108.8cm) executed
in 2008 are expected to sell at £ 3,000,000 (€ 3,800,000 US$ 5,930,000)
With some 160 or so
works to be offered in the course of the morning and afternoon sessions, the
Day Sale will bring to the market a wealth of new works – across a wide range
of estimates – embracing everything from spot paintings and drawings to
butterfly glosses and grids, and more.
The Charity Element
Coinciding with the 20th anniversary of the celebrated Freeze exhibition curated by
Hirst in London, which launched the careers of Hirst and his contemporaries, Beautiful Inside My Head
Forever affirms Hirst's position as a boundary breaker and as an
artist who has never worked in the traditional vein. At the same time, the sale
re-affirms Hirst's continued commitment to the support of charitable causes.
In February this year, Hirst joined forces with singer Bono
to spearhead the (RED) auction - a record breaking sale held at Sotheby's in
New York, whose purpose was to raise money for the United Nations Foundation to
support HIV/AIDS relief programs in Africa, conducted by The Global Fund to
Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. The sale, which included works donated by
artists such as Anish Kapoor, Marc Quinn, Marc Newson, Keith Tyson, Takashi
Murakami and Banksy, realised $42.58 million – making it the most successful
charity auction of contemporary art ever staged.
Continuing that
tradition, the September sale will include four works to be sold to benefit
charities especially designated by Hirst. They are:
Beautiful Love Demelza
Painting with Beautiful Butterflies (lot 30, est: £400,000-600,000)
to be sold to benefit Demelza, Hospice Care for Children.
Beautiful Love Survival
Painting with Beautiful Butterflies (lot 8, est:
£400,000-600,000) to be sold to benefit Survival International.
Beautiful Love
Strummerville Painting with Beautiful Butterflies (lot 109, est:
£400,000-600,000) to be sold to benefit Strummerville – the Joe Strummer
foundation for new music – aiming to create new opportunities for aspiring
musicians.
Beautiful Love Kids Co
Twenty-Five to Ten Painting with Beautiful Butterflies (lot 209, est:
£400,000-600,000) to be sold to benefit Kids Company - a charity founded by
Camila Batmanghelidjh in 1996 in order to provide practical, emotional and
educational support to vulnerable inner-city children and young people.
Alongside these will
be: Bill with Shark (lot 203, est: £200,000- 300,000) – an oil painting,
to be sold on behalf of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, based on a
photograph by Jean
Pigozzi, showing Bill Gates looking at shark-in-formaldehyde sculpture by
Hirst. Proceeds from the sale of the work will benefit the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, which aims to help reduce inequities in the United States and around the world.
Damien Hirst said: “After the success of
the Pharmacy auction, I always felt I would like to do another auction. It's a
very democratic way to sell art and it feels like a natural evolution for
contemporary art. Although there is risk involved, I embrace the challenge of
selling my work in this way. I never want to stop working with my galleries.
This is different. The world's changing, ultimately I need to see where this
road leads.”
Cheyenne Westphal,
Chairman Contemporary Art Sotheby's Europe and Oliver Barker, Sotheby's Senior International
Specialist, said: “Damien Hirst is the leading artist
of his generation. The extraordinary body of new work to be showcased at
Sotheby's is among his best yet: ambitious, exquisite and incredibly powerful.”
Jay Jopling said: “Damien has always been
a mould breaker and I've stood alongside him in all his ventures including his
strategic forays into the auction world, which have certainly helped to broaden
his market. 8,601 flawless diamonds notwithstanding, ours has never been a
traditional marriage and I look forward to many more adventures to come.”
Gagosian Gallery said: “As Damien's long-term
gallery, we've come to expect the unexpected. He can certainly count on us to
be in the room with paddle in hand.”
Preview Dates Dates:
Auction 5 – 15 September 20 2008 08 Monday, 15 September 2008: 7 pm pm, Evening
Sale Tuesday, 16 September 2008 2008: 11am , Morning session 2.30pm, Afternoon
session
Auction Record Record:
Damien Hirst's medicine cabinet, Lullaby Spring (2002) sold at Sotheby's in London
for £9.65 million in June 2007, at the time, a record for any work by a living
artist.
Damien Hirst was born in 1965 in
Bristol, UK. He grew up in Leeds before graduating with a BA in Fine Art from
Goldsmiths College, London where he was the dominant figure of a generation of
British artists. In 1988, he curated the Goldsmiths exhibition, Freeze, in a
warehouse in Surrey Docks, East London. He lives and works in London, Devon and
Mexico. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions including Into Me/Out
of Me, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2006), In- A-Gadda-Da-Vida,
Tate Britain, the 50th Venice Biennale (2003) and Century City, Tate Modern
(2001). Solo exhibitions
include Astrup Fearnley Museet fur
Moderne Kunst, Oslo (2005), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2005), Archaeological Museum,
Naples (2004) and In the darkest hour there may be light (2006) works from Damien Hirst's Murderme collection,
curated by the artist, Serpentine Gallery, London. He received the DAAD
fellowship in Berlin in 1994 and the Turner Prize in 1995. In August 2007, his
diamond-encrusted skull, For the Love of God,
sold for £50 million.
The Pharmacy Sale:
All
168 lots offered in the Pharmacy auction
at Sotheby's London in October 2004 sold, raising a total of £11,132,180 ($20,063,528)
– a figure far in excess of the pre-sale estimate of £3.5-4.9 million. Damien
Hirst's international status attracted more than 500 people into the saleroom,
many of whom spent the hour before the sale queuing on New Bond Street eager to
bid for a piece of Pharmacy's history.
The sale featured the entire range of objects that Hirst designed for the Pharmacy
restaurant, including butterfly and pill paintings, pharmacy wallpaper, large
medicine cabinets, martini glasses and even ashtrays.