12. Juni 2007
Standing within a virtually pitch-black exhibition
room inside the new White Cube at Mason’s Yard, London, I barely notice Damien
Hirst is late for our interview.
It’s not because I’m awe-struck about getting a
chance to speak with one of the richest and most celebrated artists of our
generation. With 25 years of experience of working within the art world, those
days are long gone. But standing here, in the inner sanctum of the United Kingdom’s most prestigious contemporary gallery, in the heart of Mayfair, epicentre of the
booming international art market, gazing at Hirst’s For the Love of God the most expensive piece of contemporary art ever created is causing time
to stand still.Â
The press on Hirst’s "Momento Mori" was so tightly
controlled before the opening of his new solo exhibition appropriately
titled "Beyond Belief," June 1-July 7, 2007 you would think it was a matter of
national security rather than one of the most ambitious exhibitions on this
year’s contemporary calendar. When the glittering photos of For the Love of God were released, I was sceptical, particularly given all the pre-show hype. But nothing
can prepare you for the effect of seeing this astounding object in person.
Produced by Bentley and Skinner of Bond street over a
period of 18 months, Hirst’s opus is a platinum cast of a human skull, covered
by 8,601 VVS to flawless pave-set diamonds weighing 1,106.18 carats, including
an internally flawless light fancy pink brilliant-cut pear-shaped diamond
placed in the position of the "third eye" at the center of the skull’s
forehead. Containing three times the number of diamonds in England’s Imperial State Crown (also made by Bentley and Skinner) the material costs alone are well
over £14 million. "He bought so many diamonds, the world market went up around
15%," said one Hatton Garden diamond dealer.
When Hirst finally does arrive in a chauffeur-driven
silver Mercedes 5 series with tinted windows, he is immediately inundated by
White Cube staff and security guards, dressed in tailored black suits, armed
with walkie-talkies, concealed ear pieces and conspicuous-looking bulges in
their breast pockets. Clearly no chances being taken here, given the £50
million price tag of For the Love of God. All the clamour and security
creates the mood of a popular thriller a successful robbery would be the
greatest heist story since the Mona Lisa was snatched from the walls of
the Louvre in 1911.
Since "Beyond Belief" opened a little more than a
week ago, there’s been a barrage of international press, something Hirst considers
to be one of his greatest works of art an observation which caused
consternation in the press and public alike. Not afraid of going against the
grain, Hirst speaks his mind, where others cower and compromise.
Everyone has an opinion about Hirst and his work. But
oddly, there’s been a conspicuous lack of published interviews or direct quotes
in the acres of column inches on his recent show. It is for this reason that I
offer our excerpts of our conversation, to let Hirst speak for himself about his
work and state of today’s art market.Â
Our conversation starts at the new White Cube in
Mason’s Yard, in the downstairs gallery. Wearing jeans and a Libertine shirt
with a print of a devil on the side, Hirst is warm and friendly, often
answering my questions in rapid-fire, run-on sentences, reminding me of Jack
Kerouac with a northern English accent.
Joe La Placa: What motivated you to
make For the Love of God ?Â
Damien Hirst: I’ve always loved
skulls. I’m kind of extreme. I always look for how far I can go, where the end
is. Skulls are great; they’re everywhere at the moment. They’re in everything. They’ve
become like a logo, like being in Mexico on the Day of Dead.
I started thinking how here in England, or the Western world for that matter, we’re obsessed with skulls. We avoid confronting
death. So it just seemed really weird that we love the image of the skull and
worship it and celebrate it and put it on scarves like Alexander McQueen. You
see more skulls in England than you do in Mexico, and yet superficially,
Mexicans seem to walk hand-in-hand with death, whereas we sweep it under the
carpet. . . .
JLP: Or give it a face lift!
DH: I thought: Why is that? How come
we’ve sort of embraced the image of the skull? What’s the most you can really
throw at death? What can you pit against it? Wealth? Money? Art? Power? I thought
about diamonds being forever. . . How diamond mines are sending the little guys
down holes to get the stones and paying them nothing. . . and people killing
each other for them.
JLP: I see this skull as a cautionary tale,
death veneered in precious stones people actually kill each other for.Â
DH: I think that anything great has
that attached to it you get factions. You get those for, you get those
against; you get hate, you get the love; you get the beauty and you get the
horror. That’s great.
But wealth, you know, doesn’t last long. But it’s what
people want. I’m in a lucky position where I can afford to make something of
this scale, so I thought, fuck it, I’ll go for it.Â
We descend to the lower floor
gallery to look at Death Explained, a recent evolution on Hirst’s iconic The
Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, a menacing
shark floating in a nightmarish cloud of formaldehyde solution. In Death
Explained however, the shark is cut down the middle with laser-like precision.
Each half is individually encased in a separate vitrine, with just enough space
to walk in between them, allowing the viewer to walk through the shark’s
interior.
JLP: Why cut the shark in half?
DH: I think we cut everything in half,
don’t we?
JLP: Expose the guts, the inside?
DH: When you look through a microscope,
you often have to kill what you’re looking at. When you cut something like that, it’s to show the inside. And
you look at it and think: Ah! That’s how it works! But it doesn’t work, because
you cut it in half.
Lining the two opposite walls of the
downstairs gallery are Hirst’s series of "Biopsy Paintings." The 30 titles read
like a medical text: M122/388 Paget’s disease of the Breast,light_micrograph_SPL.jpg is one example. The works are composed of photographs of various
forms of cancer and terminal illnesses sourced from the Science photo library. The
images are photographed through a microscope, blown-up and silk-screened onto
canvas. Hundreds of surgical blades have been sprinkled onto the canvas along
with broken glass and hair, all menacingly trapped in clear resin.
JLP: Why the scalpels, glass and hair?Â
DH: Pain. . . . When I was a kid I
used to hang out in a car garage. There were lots of crashed cars, and I’d make
stuff. I’d find broken glass and blood on some of the things, and hair.
JLP: Do you feel any less anxiety about
dying, now that you’ve immortalized yourself by making For the Love of God?
DH: I don’t know if anxiety’s a good
word to describe how you feel about dying. I mean, it’s a mixture of emotions.
Every day I’ve woken up, every time I think about it, it changes and you adapt
and you don’t get any wiser. But it just gets kind of more encroaching. There’s
a great poem by Phillip Larkin that I like called Aubade, which is
brilliant. It’s really about insomnia, but it’s about dying as well. It’s very,
very good. It basically says if you think about death long enough, you just
can’t function.
JLP: From an Eastern point of view
however, the contemplation of death or what they call impermanence, is one of
the main activities of Buddhist thought.
DH: I don’t believe in all that. I
don’t believe it works.
JLP: No?
DH: No, I don’t believe that you get
any wiser. I think that’s just a myth. Buddhism is just like having a big yacht
where you’ve got other people in bigger yachts parking next to you. And then
they keep talking about this huge imaginary yacht that everyone can get but
they never get it. Life’s rotten on a lot of levels.
JLP: Life is suffering. . .
DH: Yeah, life is definitely suffering.
I think you can hum and chant as long as you like but, at the end of the day,
some fucking big Nazi’s going to walk in and stick a bayonet through your heart.
. . and fuck your girlfriend!
Contrary to the rest of the gallery,
the ground floor gallery is full of life. Hirst’s "Birth Paintings" are based
on photographic images of the artist’s youngest son Cyrus, born by Caesarean
section in August 2005. They are both brutal in their frank depiction of birth
and tender at the same time, the gesture of a loving father immortalising his
young son.
JLP: So, needless to say, you don’t
believe in reincarnation or anything of the sort?
DH: No, I don’t. I believe in Art as a
kind of spiritual thing really, or a religious thing. I really believe that! To
watch a baby being born is to believe in miracles.
Life is amazing. But I don’t believe in any of that
voodoo, supernatural shite. I believe in fortuity. We’re all a part of
everything so if you act in the right way, you can generate these great
moments, where great things happen. Great art can be made or just a great
party. When you put all the right ingredients together in the right way, then
things go your way. And if you work against it, things go badly. But that’s
about it for me.
As we continue our walk through the
downstairs gallery, more and more visitors begin to trail behind us, straining
their ears to hear what Hirst is saying. One of the bolder visitors, a young
female art student, is carrying a plaster cast of a cross section of a head.
Desperate to get an autograph, she rudely interrupts the interview, begging Hirst
to sign the cast. Despite the annoyance, he does so good-naturedly. But with
the crowd now gathering like a storm, it’s time to move to Jay Jopling’s
private office upstairs.
At the time of writing this article,
no less than six potential clients were competing to purchase For the Love of God.
One client, wishing to remain anonymous, if successful in purchasing the piece,
had already organized a two year tour, calculating he’d make a large percentage
of the purchase price back from exhibition fees.
JLP: For The Love of God has a
huge sale price of $100 million. . .
DH: It’s too cheap! People really want
it.
JLP: £50 million is too cheap?
DH: Definitely! If the Crown Jewels
were on the market, they’d sell for a hell of a lot more than that. It’s just
one of those objects.
JLP: Yes, but in relation to what other
contemporary art has sold for, this is over the top, particularly for a living
artist.
DH: Not really. What do you mean,
living artist? That’s a bit of a fucking red herring really, isn’t it, a living
artist? I mean, art lasts for thousands of years; it’s been going on for
thousands of years and a human’s lifetime is less than a hundred years. There
are only a few artists alive, relatively speaking. And the art market is, what,
2000 years old and beyond, of artistic activity? You need to forget about the
living artist and just talk about art.Â
When I got into the art world, I consciously wanted
to change it. I found it really annoying because it seemed like a kind of club
where people would sell cheaply to investors and they’d make the money. Collectors
would take the art off the artists and, because they came in early and they
gave the artist a little bit of money, later, when the artwork got resold,
it would be the collector who made the big money in the secondary market. And I
always thought that was fucking wrong. I’m the artist, the primary market. And I
want the money to be in the primary market.Â
I’ve always said it’s like going into Prada and
buying a coat for two quid and then selling it next door a charity shop for 200
quid. It’s totally fucking wrong! Why are they doing it that way round? Art should
be expensive the first time around. There shouldn’t be all these old boys
making loads of money on the secondary market.Â
JLP: So you’re saying it’s the artists who
should make the lion’s share of the money, not the dealers or collectors?
DH: Right. We should have learned from
what happened to Van Gogh. Art has a kind of value now! People fall for that
old fucking vintage trick, don’t they? "Oh, it’s a vintage antique, so it must
be expensive." But that’s another priority. When you go in someone’s house and
see a painting on the wall, a new painting should be much more exciting than an
old painting. . . and that should be where the money is spent.
JLP: Last Friday, I spoke on a panel at
the London School of Business. The topic was "Art as a Asset Class." Basically,
lots of banks and wealth managers are looking to invest more and more in art,
but find it difficult to do so because financial transactions in the galleries,
which currently represent an estimated 65% of the world turnover of Fine Art,
are so reluctant to report sale prices. It’s typical to go into a gallery, ask
the dealer about the price of a major work, and basically be told none of your
business!
DH: That’s because they’re all
bullshitting. I remember asking one dealer I used to work with, "Why can’t we
sell this piece more expensively?" And they said, "Well, you’ve got to allow
the people buying it to make a little bit of money." And I said "Fuck that!" If
they’re buying it to make money, they shouldn’t be buying it at all. They
should be buying it to put on the wall. I don’t want to sell to people so they
can make money!
Another time, I went into a gallery after a boozy
lunch and tried to buy a painting. And they said, "Who are you?" And I’m like,
"Fuck who I am, I want to buy a painting!" The problem is you can’t buy things until
they find out who you are because the price depends on how much money you’ve
got, which is archaic.Â
JLP: For the moment, that’s right. But
the art market’s heading towards a more transparent state, something Artnet has
advocated for years. Proof of this increased transparency can be seen by the
dramatic increase in turnover by the public auction houses like Christie’s,
whose European turnover alone increased over 40% last year, the highest in the
company’s history.
DH: I think art will always be a great
fucking investment. It’s the most powerful currency in the world, the best
thing you could spend your money on.
And like the great quote says: There are no pockets
in a shroud. You can’t take it with you after you die. But what you can do is build
a museum, put the paintings inside and call it the Sainsbury wing. So in a way,
buying art guarantees you immortality. . . . If that’s what you want; there’s
no other way of doing it.Â
JLP: In the ‘80s, when I worked with
the graffiti writers, despite painting on canvas, they continued to paint on subway
cars because they were able to take their paintings from one place to another
and expose them to three million people a day.
DH: I think that’s good. I much prefer
to exhibit in contemporary galleries than in museums because it’s more alive
and it gets out there and people buy it. I like the commerce of it. I like the
fact that the art changes hands and moves around and just feels alive. But once
you get art into a museum, it starts to die.
I recently refused to do an exhibition because they
wanted to charge people money to go and see it. I always want my shows to have
free admission. If you open free shows to the public, then you can sort of justify
the big prices in some way because you’re not earning any revenue from ticket
sales, for example. Also, if you start charging people an entrance fee, lots of
people won’t be able to afford to see the show. No, I don’t like museums you
have to pay for.
JLP: Given your resources though, like
your organization Science, which has 125 people on the payroll, you could
probably rent some incredible place and open your own gallery, if you wanted
to.
DH: Well, I was thinking about that. But
although I like selling art, I don’t like physically having to sell it.
JLP: I don’t mean you personally you
have people in Science that could do it for you.
DH: Yeah, but I like galleries,
particularly the one’s I work with. I think they’re cool. That said, we’ve got
plans for opening a gallery in Lambeth with my company Other Criteria. Although
it’ll be a gallery, it’s more a place where we can play, really. We want to be
able to show things we don’t have to sell.Â
JLP: I always thought Other Criteria
was your publishing arm. . .
DH: It is, but it’s now going to have
a gallery attached as well, the Criteria Gallery. I might do a show there every
few years, but we’ll also invite curators from outside the organisation. I
don’t want a program. I think that’s what fucks galleries up, when you go in
there, say you want to do a show next week, and you see their exhibition
program is booked up for the next four years.Â
JLP: So the Criteria Gallery will open
without a program?
DH: Yeah. It’ll start empty and have a
restaurant too.
JLP: So it’ll be like an art complex?
DH: We’ve got five buildings. I’ve got
some great plans by the architect Caruso St. John, and hopefully, after this
show, we’re going to start building.
JLP: What direction will your work go
in the future?
DH: You never know where you’re going
to go, do you? You’ve just got to keep moving along and try to keep it
exciting. Frank Dunphy, my business manager, said to me, "All you’ve got to do
is make sure that you’re using your money to chase the art and not your art to
chase the money."
JLP: Frank is a wise man!
DH: If you’re just making art for money
then it’s fucked. But if you use your money to make great art, it’s the best
thing you can do.
There’s a lot of pressure though, because you can get
bored with what you’re making. And when there’s a big demand, you’ve really got
to fight through the temptation and get out the other side. People come up to
me all the time and say, "I love your early work, have you got any left?" They
want the stuff from the past that’s been tried and tested. And that’s another
fear, that your old work’s great and your new work’s shit. So you’ve just got
to keep going forward.Â
When I look at great artists I admire, like Willem De
Kooning, I see huge changes in his paintings over the years. Yet everyone
thinks he’s only an Abstract Expressionist. But De Kooning’s got more to do
with Soutine. He’s just trying to satisfy himself. There are these major, major
changes in his work every three or four years. That’s what makes him great,
what makes him stand and shine out from the rest of them.Â
JLP: I believe the natural state of
life is change. Going against this idea is what’s caused artists to
self-destruct; they keep on making the same thing for money, but they actually
want to evolve and change. It leads to self-destruction.Â
DH: Bacon is a brilliant example of that
level of change I’m speaking about. He was a brilliant painter and I love him. And
like him, I just keep trying to push the envelope, to keep going forward.
JLP: Have you been building a big
collection?
DH: I’ve slowed down buying a little
bit. But I still love collecting. There are some great things out there.
JLP: What type of stuff are you buying
now?
DH: I’ve been buying works by Jeff
Koons, a couple of Bacons, Richard Prince, Jim Lambie, Sarah Lucas, Matt Collishaw
and lots of other people. I’ve even bought a stain painting by Helen
Frankenthaler!
JLP: I get the feeling that if you were
to be reborn, you’d want to come back as a great painter like Titian.
DH: I do love painting completely, but
I don’t know if I’d want to possess the virtuosity of Titian. I mean, I don’t
need his ability.
JLP: Why? Because someone else can do
it for you?
DH: My favourite painters are Goya,
Soutine and Bacon. Paintings are about truth and belief; it’s not about
ability. Ability comes with practice. But belief, truth and guts don’t come
with anything. You just take whatever ability you’ve got and you try and
communicate something. And that’s the great thing about painting.
JLP: But isn’t the technical virtuosity
of a painter important?
DH: If you look at Bacon, then
obviously not, because Bacon’s virtuosity is fucking terrible.
JLP: How so?
DH: What do we mean when we say "…ability
to paint?" Do you mean the way that he can depict things? Is it the accuracy of
how an artist renders something? Is this virtuosity?Â
JLP: In certain cases, yes.
DH: But Bacon’s got no real ability to
render. He was in tears because he couldn’t paint like Rembrandt. So he went
for the subject instead. When you look at his work, you can clearly see he didn’t
go for virtuosity. He’s really trying to get what both Velasquez and Rembrandt
have, but with less ability.
JLP: Do you think painting has arrived
at a dead-end or is there still room for experimentation and innovation?
DH: I think painting’s brilliant. I
think it’s the most brilliant thing there is. It’s amazing, because like books,
paintings will never go out of style.Â
Painting is only recently coming out the arse-end of
photography. I think painting was mother-fucked by photography. But that’s been
put to bed, so we can all relax. It’s photography that’s getting a hammering
now because no-one believes it anymore, particularly since it can be
digitalised. People thought photography was real, but that’s wrong. Painting’s
real; photography’s fake. For a while there, people just couldn’t believe in
painting because photography just stood and represented such a real thing. But
not anymore, baby!
JOE LA PLACA is Artnet’s chief London representative.