News

Damien Hirst Turns out, he was impossible to ignore. In Damien Hirst's hands, anatomical models became giant sculptures; medicine cabinets became shrines for multi-colored pills.
New York art collective MSCHF purchased a Damien Hirst print for $30,000, before cutting out its 88 dots and selling them individually at huge profit.
Damien Hirst has admitted that he used treat property “a bit like Monopoly” and would even buy the villas he stayed in each time he went on holiday.
Damien Hirst's "Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable" is at Palazzo Grassi and Punta Della Dogana, reviewed by Hettie Judah.
Damien Hirst’s woes with animal rights groups continues, this time over an installation at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg.
On the eve of Damien Hirst’s 60th birthday, two philosophers of art explore the true value of the ‘world’s richest artist’.
Efforts by powerful brokers to buy up Damien Hirst’s work offer a real-time glimpse into the maneuverings that influence art-market prices.
Artist Damien Hirst last night revealed that he turned down the offer of a knighthood because he did not feel comfortable accepting the honour. In a rare interview, Britain’s richest artist ...
Damien Hirst’s Mortuary (2003-4), at the Gagosian Gallery. Photograph courtesy of the Gagosian Gallery. Damien hirst is famous for suspending dead animals, among them cows and sheep, in steel ...
New York art collective MSCHF purchased a Damien Hirst print for $30,000, before cutting out its 88 dots and selling them individually at huge profit.
Damien Hirst has admitted that he used treat property “a bit like Monopoly” and would even buy the villas he stayed in each time he went on holiday.