Damien Hirst (1965) - The Currency
Technique: Porzellan
Signature: faksimilierte Signatur
Damien Hirst (1965) , The Currency, 2016.
\r
Printed porcelain, 26. 5 cm diameter, printed signature and title on the back.
\r
Provenance: Private collection, Germany.
\r
Condition: Very good condition.
\r
Will be shipped in the original box and case in the original packaging.
\r
biography
Damien Hirst, born in Bristol, England, grew up in Leeds, studied at London's Goldsmith College from 1986 to 1989. In 1988 he organized the exhibition “Freeze” for himself and his fellow students, which brought the young artists, especially Hirst himself, the lucrative attention of Charles Saatchi and thus the international art market. Thanks in part to his effective self-marketing, he became one of the most highly traded contemporary artists in the 1990s. Hirst uses provocative to shocking means to address, among other things, beauty, transience and death, a traditional theme in art history.
\r
\r
#Orlinski
View it on
Sale price
Estimate
Time, Location
Auction House
Technique: Porzellan
Signature: faksimilierte Signatur
Damien Hirst (1965) , The Currency, 2016.
\r
Printed porcelain, 26. 5 cm diameter, printed signature and title on the back.
\r
Provenance: Private collection, Germany.
\r
Condition: Very good condition.
\r
Will be shipped in the original box and case in the original packaging.
\r
biography
Damien Hirst, born in Bristol, England, grew up in Leeds, studied at London's Goldsmith College from 1986 to 1989. In 1988 he organized the exhibition “Freeze” for himself and his fellow students, which brought the young artists, especially Hirst himself, the lucrative attention of Charles Saatchi and thus the international art market. Thanks in part to his effective self-marketing, he became one of the most highly traded contemporary artists in the 1990s. Hirst uses provocative to shocking means to address, among other things, beauty, transience and death, a traditional theme in art history.
\r
\r
#Orlinski