SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 27
Postmodernism in Art:
An Introduction

Artist as celebrity:
Brit art and self branding
Trading originality for celebrity?




Hirst, the richest contemporary artist in the world, valued at £235
million in 2011
Objectives:

To explore

• Andy Warhol's legacy through
yBa artists who embody the
notion of artist as celebrity and
commercial brand

•the artist's use of persona to
build up a myth, artists
increasingly embracing
consumerism and commerce and
their use of mass media long
frowned upon by the world of fine
art
“Being good in business is the most
fascinating kind of art. Making money is art
and working is art and good business is the
best art.”
                                   Andy Warhol
Material World




                 Tracey Emin
                 Money Photo
                 Spider Legs
                 (2001)
“Money is massive”
              Damien Hirst
The Shop that Emin
opened on Bethnal Green
Road in 1993 with fellow
artist Sarah Lucas, selling
objects made from beer
cans and cigarette packets
and T-shirts saying
‘Complete Arsehole’ on
the front.

This experiment in
commerce lasted just six
months
Fame and Fortune
Cool
Britannia




New Labour put the ‘Creative
Industries’ at the heart of its
vision for the future of Britain
“Jonnie ShandKyddd, a relative of Princess
Diana, has produced a book of
photographs of artists idling on the scene,
drinking and falling about…The very fact
that this book of banal and poorly taken
photographs was published, and by a
major publisher at that, is a register of the
extent to which the artists themselves
have become a focus for curiosity as
personalities, as stars.”
Julian Stallabrass, High Art Lite
‘The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living’, Damien Hirst (1991)
Stallabrass states that there is
certainly no common
programme to this art: there
are no manifestos, no group
statements, and no shared
style. Yet there are
distinguishing characteristics
that he identifies as:

• An overtly contemporary
flavour to the art, despite it’s
‘Britishness’ is not provincial
and thus appeals to an
international market
• The artists have a new and
distinctive relation to the mass
media and frequently use
materials drawn from mass
culture
•They present conceptual
work in a visually accessible
and spectacular form
“...a great piece of art can
transcend various ephemeral,
cultural situations. To give you a
clearer idea... I’m not at all
interested in issue-based art ...
I’m interested in art which has a
certain degree of universality and
is able to transcend certain
cultural and generational
differences.”

Jay Jopling
Tracy Emin
My Bed
(1998)
“Celebrity is about control and distance; it
is about adding space to the space that
inevitably exists between human beings
and remaining apart from the flock. It is
about degrees of separation and personal
insulation and choosing, as Jeff Koons
apparently did, to place the flesh cell of
your person inside a second, more
unbreachable container tank.”

Gordon Burn. (31 August 1996). Hirst world.
Guardian (Weekend), pp. 10-14
“Art’s about life and the art
world’s about money, and
money and celebrity are just
tiny aspects of life. So if you
keep your perspective on that,
it’s fine. I think art should be
able to deal with celebrity. I
don’t think you should ever let
celebrity become more
important than art but I think
it’s a part of it. I think a desire
to be famous is a desire to live
forever which is very
fundamental to art.”

Steve Beard. (1-7 September 1977).
Nobody’s fool *interview with Damien
Hirst]. Big Issue, pp. 12-4.
Damien Hirst
                        In and Out of Love (1991)


This work was symptomatic of various recent developments on the
British art scene. Non-art objects, or beings, brought into contact with
traditional fine-art materials and modes of display.
Stallabrass has argued that
Hirst’s work now functions
like a logo for the artist’s
personality and that he is
able to market his work
successfully because of his
celebrity status.
Gavin Turk
Relic (Cave)



The original blue plaque from
'Cave' installation encased in a
Beuysianvitrine.

In the summer of 1991 for his
graduation show from the Royal
College of Art, the artist exhibited
a blue Heritage plaque in an
otherwise empty studio which
commemorated his own presence
as a sculptor.
                                       The title Cave refers to an allegorical picture of Plato,
                                       which describes a model of perception. A group of
                                       prisoners have been chained in a cave since childhood
                                       with no experience of reality other than the flickering
                                       shadows cast by the people and things moving along a
                                       path in front of a fire situated behind them. In the
                                       plaque, the artist was represented by a retrospective
                                       view of his life.
"I wasn't interested in
   being a celebrity, to the
   point where my work was
   trying to criticise celebrity
   which stops you being
   able to see the real value
   of things. Art is about the
   public. Sometimes art
   loses value as it obtains
   such ridiculous
   [monetary] values. It
   becomes elite.”
                      Gavin Turk




Gavin Turk
Pop (1993)
Turk highlights the Duchampian idea that questions the
connections between artists and the work:


“In the beginning I tried to create an
artists who had the same name as me. I
was interested in the cliché of art, the
myth of the artist, stereotyping, all art
as types of signature. And at first there
was a quite clear and comfortable
degree of separation. The artist Gavin
Turk had a studio and made art under a
certain kind of licence. Now it has
become much more problematic to
sustain a separation between myself
and the artist Gavin Turk.”
‘Sensation’ exhibition at
London’s Royal Academy of Art
in 1997 was a public airing of
the private collector Charles
Saatchi, the only major collector
of contemporary art in Britain
during this period whose
dealings affected the entire art
market.
Marcus Harvey,
   Marc Quinn, ‘Self’ (1991)
                                                ‘Myra’ (1995)

Populist, careerist? Does this mean that there was a complicit and wilful
avoidance of difficult, theoretical or ideological work?
Sam Taylor-Wood,
whose photographic
self-portrait posing with
her trousers down and
the words ‘Suck, Fuck,
Spank, Wank’, came to
sum up the boisterous
hedonism of the yBas
Hirst’s says of celebrity status:

“You’ve got to become a celebrity before you can undermine it,
take it apart, show people that there’s no difference between
celebrities and real life. Celebrity is a fucking lie. It’s like; I’ll do a
magic trick, and I want it to be amazing. But if anyone asks me
how to do it, I’ll show them exactly how to do it. I want you to
be amazed twice. Once you’re amazed because it seems
impossible, and then, you’re amazed because it’s fucking easy.
That’s what it’s like.”

Damien Hirst quoted by Gordon Burn. (6 Sept 1997) The height of morbid manner.
Guardian (Weekend), pp14-21
‘Warhol never
claimed his work
had any deep value.
He openly said all
his work was about
money. Hirst, on
the other hand, will
sign a cigarette butt
and tell you it’s art.’
              Stallabrass

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Week 2 art as idea
Week 2 art as idea Week 2 art as idea
Week 2 art as idea DeborahJ
 
Art Movements Post Wwii
Art Movements Post WwiiArt Movements Post Wwii
Art Movements Post Wwiicdebano
 
The Components of Art
The Components of ArtThe Components of Art
The Components of ArtGary Freeman
 
Abstract Art
Abstract ArtAbstract Art
Abstract ArtGhazal S.
 
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945smolinskiel
 
What Modern Art can teach us about Creativity
What Modern Art can teach us about CreativityWhat Modern Art can teach us about Creativity
What Modern Art can teach us about CreativityPodium Wisdom
 
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Try
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to TryGot Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Try
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Trysionabart
 
21st century artists great power point
21st century artists great power point21st century artists great power point
21st century artists great power pointmissfmay
 
01 understanding the arts 4wks
01 understanding the arts   4wks01 understanding the arts   4wks
01 understanding the arts 4wksPetrutaLipan
 
Lecture, 1970-79
Lecture, 1970-79Lecture, 1970-79
Lecture, 1970-79Laura Smith
 

Mais procurados (16)

Week 2 art as idea
Week 2 art as idea Week 2 art as idea
Week 2 art as idea
 
Art Movements Post Wwii
Art Movements Post WwiiArt Movements Post Wwii
Art Movements Post Wwii
 
Avant garde
Avant gardeAvant garde
Avant garde
 
Art since 1945
Art since 1945Art since 1945
Art since 1945
 
The Components of Art
The Components of ArtThe Components of Art
The Components of Art
 
UVC100_Fall16_Class2
UVC100_Fall16_Class2UVC100_Fall16_Class2
UVC100_Fall16_Class2
 
Abstract Art
Abstract ArtAbstract Art
Abstract Art
 
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945
Modern Art in Europe and the Americas 1900-1945
 
What Modern Art can teach us about Creativity
What Modern Art can teach us about CreativityWhat Modern Art can teach us about Creativity
What Modern Art can teach us about Creativity
 
Conceptual art
Conceptual artConceptual art
Conceptual art
 
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Try
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to TryGot Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Try
Got Style? 4 Different Types of Art Styles to Try
 
15 Conceptual Art
15 Conceptual Art15 Conceptual Art
15 Conceptual Art
 
Individual and Culture
Individual and CultureIndividual and Culture
Individual and Culture
 
21st century artists great power point
21st century artists great power point21st century artists great power point
21st century artists great power point
 
01 understanding the arts 4wks
01 understanding the arts   4wks01 understanding the arts   4wks
01 understanding the arts 4wks
 
Lecture, 1970-79
Lecture, 1970-79Lecture, 1970-79
Lecture, 1970-79
 

Destaque

Destaque (6)

Damien Hirst
Damien HirstDamien Hirst
Damien Hirst
 
Damien hirst
Damien hirstDamien hirst
Damien hirst
 
Jovens Artistas Ingleses
Jovens Artistas InglesesJovens Artistas Ingleses
Jovens Artistas Ingleses
 
Britains got talent
Britains got talentBritains got talent
Britains got talent
 
Damien Hirst
Damien HirstDamien Hirst
Damien Hirst
 
INVESTOR LUMAscape
INVESTOR LUMAscapeINVESTOR LUMAscape
INVESTOR LUMAscape
 

Semelhante a Week 9 Postmodernism: Artist as celebrity: Brit Art

Art is one medium
Art is one mediumArt is one medium
Art is one mediumgiuniper
 
Year 11 exam
Year 11 examYear 11 exam
Year 11 exammissfmay
 
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...bienvenidobonesbanez1
 
4.1 junk assemblage
4.1 junk assemblage4.1 junk assemblage
4.1 junk assemblageMelissa Hall
 
Life without buildings: Institutions and Objections
Life without buildings: Institutions and ObjectionsLife without buildings: Institutions and Objections
Life without buildings: Institutions and ObjectionsDeborahJ
 
Purity and decadence
Purity and decadencePurity and decadence
Purity and decadenceecajbeagles
 
Authorship lecture
Authorship lectureAuthorship lecture
Authorship lectureecajbeagles
 
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)DeborahJ
 
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and Audience
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and AudienceChapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and Audience
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and AudiencePetrutaLipan
 
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)Art Law Introductory Class (2013)
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)Vik Kanwar
 
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)Rab J
 
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1SHGC Pop Art - Part 1
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1rachaelwhare
 
Assemblage sculpture
Assemblage sculptureAssemblage sculpture
Assemblage sculptureJonard Cruz
 
Chapter 1 the origins of modern art
Chapter 1   the origins of modern artChapter 1   the origins of modern art
Chapter 1 the origins of modern artPetrutaLipan
 
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smal
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smalSUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smal
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smalBolton Colburn
 
Exam part 1
Exam part 1Exam part 1
Exam part 1missfmay
 

Semelhante a Week 9 Postmodernism: Artist as celebrity: Brit Art (20)

Manifestos
ManifestosManifestos
Manifestos
 
Form
FormForm
Form
 
Contemporary Art Essay
Contemporary Art EssayContemporary Art Essay
Contemporary Art Essay
 
Moma 1991 0098_71
Moma 1991 0098_71Moma 1991 0098_71
Moma 1991 0098_71
 
Art is one medium
Art is one mediumArt is one medium
Art is one medium
 
Year 11 exam
Year 11 examYear 11 exam
Year 11 exam
 
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...
What's New in the Surreal World - Surrealism isn’t dead - Its dreaming. By Te...
 
4.1 junk assemblage
4.1 junk assemblage4.1 junk assemblage
4.1 junk assemblage
 
Life without buildings: Institutions and Objections
Life without buildings: Institutions and ObjectionsLife without buildings: Institutions and Objections
Life without buildings: Institutions and Objections
 
Purity and decadence
Purity and decadencePurity and decadence
Purity and decadence
 
Authorship lecture
Authorship lectureAuthorship lecture
Authorship lecture
 
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)
Week 1 po mo intro 2012 (nx powerlite)
 
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and Audience
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and AudienceChapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and Audience
Chapter 26 - New Perspectives on Art and Audience
 
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)Art Law Introductory Class (2013)
Art Law Introductory Class (2013)
 
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)
'Manet for Nothing, Matisse for Free' (Art Quiz) - Artipelago '18 (PRELIMS)
 
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1SHGC Pop Art - Part 1
SHGC Pop Art - Part 1
 
Assemblage sculpture
Assemblage sculptureAssemblage sculpture
Assemblage sculpture
 
Chapter 1 the origins of modern art
Chapter 1   the origins of modern artChapter 1   the origins of modern art
Chapter 1 the origins of modern art
 
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smal
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smalSUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smal
SUNSHINE BOOK_fnl-smal
 
Exam part 1
Exam part 1Exam part 1
Exam part 1
 

Mais de DeborahJ

The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perception
The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perceptionThe power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perception
The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perceptionDeborahJ
 
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution DeborahJ
 
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtBeyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtDeborahJ
 
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and Productivity
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and ProductivitySelf Organise: Reflections on Labour and Productivity
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and ProductivityDeborahJ
 
Why art cannot be taught
Why art cannot be taught Why art cannot be taught
Why art cannot be taught DeborahJ
 
Self Organise: Artists Take Control
Self Organise: Artists Take ControlSelf Organise: Artists Take Control
Self Organise: Artists Take ControlDeborahJ
 
1 self organise 2015
1 self organise 20151 self organise 2015
1 self organise 2015DeborahJ
 
Dialogue, participation, relational aesthetics
Dialogue, participation, relational aestheticsDialogue, participation, relational aesthetics
Dialogue, participation, relational aestheticsDeborahJ
 
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism Impressionism
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism ImpressionismHow Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism Impressionism
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism ImpressionismDeborahJ
 
Women in Scottish Art
Women in Scottish ArtWomen in Scottish Art
Women in Scottish ArtDeborahJ
 
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman Canons
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman CanonsHow Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman Canons
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman CanonsDeborahJ
 
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the isms
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the ismsHow Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the isms
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the ismsDeborahJ
 
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual Analysis
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual AnalysisIs a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual Analysis
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual AnalysisDeborahJ
 
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis DeborahJ
 
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?DeborahJ
 
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’ How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’ DeborahJ
 
Self-Organise: Collectivism
Self-Organise: CollectivismSelf-Organise: Collectivism
Self-Organise: CollectivismDeborahJ
 
Self-Organise: Artists take Control
Self-Organise: Artists take ControlSelf-Organise: Artists take Control
Self-Organise: Artists take ControlDeborahJ
 
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, Organise
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, OrganiseSelf-Organise: Educate, Agitate, Organise
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, OrganiseDeborahJ
 
Introduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureIntroduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureDeborahJ
 

Mais de DeborahJ (20)

The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perception
The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perceptionThe power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perception
The power of the image: Contemporary art, gender, and the politics of perception
 
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution
The global image. from consumer culture to the digital revolution
 
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary ArtBeyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
Beyond the visual: The Body in Contemporary Art
 
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and Productivity
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and ProductivitySelf Organise: Reflections on Labour and Productivity
Self Organise: Reflections on Labour and Productivity
 
Why art cannot be taught
Why art cannot be taught Why art cannot be taught
Why art cannot be taught
 
Self Organise: Artists Take Control
Self Organise: Artists Take ControlSelf Organise: Artists Take Control
Self Organise: Artists Take Control
 
1 self organise 2015
1 self organise 20151 self organise 2015
1 self organise 2015
 
Dialogue, participation, relational aesthetics
Dialogue, participation, relational aestheticsDialogue, participation, relational aesthetics
Dialogue, participation, relational aesthetics
 
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism Impressionism
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism ImpressionismHow Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism Impressionism
How Art Works Week 9: Revolutionism Case Studies: Romanticism Impressionism
 
Women in Scottish Art
Women in Scottish ArtWomen in Scottish Art
Women in Scottish Art
 
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman Canons
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman CanonsHow Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman Canons
How Art Works: Week 6 Classicism Case Studies: Greek and Roman Canons
 
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the isms
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the ismsHow Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the isms
How Art Works: Week 5 The Rise of the isms
 
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual Analysis
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual AnalysisIs a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual Analysis
Is a picture worth 1,000 words? Textual Analysis
 
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis
How Art Works: Week 3 What makes Art Different? Comparative Analysis
 
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?
How Art Works: Week 2 What is Art made of?
 
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’ How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’
How Art Works: Week 1 The ‘unruly discipline’
 
Self-Organise: Collectivism
Self-Organise: CollectivismSelf-Organise: Collectivism
Self-Organise: Collectivism
 
Self-Organise: Artists take Control
Self-Organise: Artists take ControlSelf-Organise: Artists take Control
Self-Organise: Artists take Control
 
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, Organise
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, OrganiseSelf-Organise: Educate, Agitate, Organise
Self-Organise: Educate, Agitate, Organise
 
Introduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual CultureIntroduction to Visual Culture
Introduction to Visual Culture
 

Último

Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...
Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...
Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...First NO1 World Amil baba in Faisalabad
 
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch Document
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch DocumentTaken Pilot Episode Story pitch Document
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch Documentf4ssvxpz62
 
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzers
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzersQUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzers
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzersSJU Quizzers
 
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full Fun
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full FunNorth Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full Fun
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full FunKomal Khan
 
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts Service
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts ServiceCall Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts Service
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts ServiceTina Ji
 
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts Service
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts ServiceVip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts Service
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts ServiceApsara Of India
 
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcE
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcEViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcE
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcEApsara Of India
 
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfile
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfileStatement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfile
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfilef4ssvxpz62
 
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Nightssuser7cb4ff
 
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...Amil Baba Company
 
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girls
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call GirlsCall Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girls
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girlsssuser7cb4ff
 
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].pp
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].ppGRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].pp
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].ppJasmineLinogon
 
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713Sonam Pathan
 
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Nightssuser7cb4ff
 
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur Rajasthan
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur RajasthanUdaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur Rajasthan
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur RajasthanApsara Of India
 
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一lvtagr7
 
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...Amil Baba Company
 
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Nightssuser7cb4ff
 

Último (20)

Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...
Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...
Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Pakistan Authentic No 1 Amil Baba In Karachi No 1...
 
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch Document
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch DocumentTaken Pilot Episode Story pitch Document
Taken Pilot Episode Story pitch Document
 
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzers
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzersQUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzers
QUIZ BOLLYWOOD ( weekly quiz ) - SJU quizzers
 
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full Fun
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full FunNorth Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full Fun
North Avenue Call Girls Services, Hire Now for Full Fun
 
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts Service
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts ServiceCall Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts Service
Call Girls in Faridabad 9000000000 Faridabad Escorts Service
 
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts Service
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts ServiceVip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts Service
Vip Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Dabok Airport Udaipur Escorts Service
 
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcE
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcEViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcE
ViP Call Girls In Udaipur 9602870969 Gulab Bagh Escorts SeRvIcE
 
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfile
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfileStatement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfile
Statement Of Intent - - Copy.documentfile
 
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sanand 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
 
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...
Amil baba in Pakistan amil baba Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil baba in la...
 
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girls
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call GirlsCall Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girls
Call Girls Ellis Bridge 7397865700 Independent Call Girls
 
Call Girls Koti 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Koti 7001305949 all area service COD available Any TimeCall Girls Koti 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
Call Girls Koti 7001305949 all area service COD available Any Time
 
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].pp
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].ppGRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].pp
GRADE 7 NEW PPT ENGLISH 1 [Autosaved].pp
 
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713
Call Girl Contact Number Andheri WhatsApp:+91-9833363713
 
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls SG Highway 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
 
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur Rajasthan
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur RajasthanUdaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur Rajasthan
Udaipur Call Girls 9602870969 Call Girl in Udaipur Rajasthan
 
Environment Handling Presentation by Likhon Ahmed.pptx
Environment Handling Presentation by Likhon Ahmed.pptxEnvironment Handling Presentation by Likhon Ahmed.pptx
Environment Handling Presentation by Likhon Ahmed.pptx
 
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(UofT毕业证书)加拿大多伦多大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
 
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...
No,1 Amil baba Islamabad Astrologer in Karachi amil baba in pakistan amil bab...
 
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Sabarmati 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
 

Week 9 Postmodernism: Artist as celebrity: Brit Art

  • 1. Postmodernism in Art: An Introduction Artist as celebrity: Brit art and self branding
  • 2. Trading originality for celebrity? Hirst, the richest contemporary artist in the world, valued at £235 million in 2011
  • 3. Objectives: To explore • Andy Warhol's legacy through yBa artists who embody the notion of artist as celebrity and commercial brand •the artist's use of persona to build up a myth, artists increasingly embracing consumerism and commerce and their use of mass media long frowned upon by the world of fine art
  • 4. “Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art. Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art.” Andy Warhol
  • 5. Material World Tracey Emin Money Photo Spider Legs (2001)
  • 6. “Money is massive” Damien Hirst
  • 7. The Shop that Emin opened on Bethnal Green Road in 1993 with fellow artist Sarah Lucas, selling objects made from beer cans and cigarette packets and T-shirts saying ‘Complete Arsehole’ on the front. This experiment in commerce lasted just six months
  • 9. Cool Britannia New Labour put the ‘Creative Industries’ at the heart of its vision for the future of Britain
  • 10. “Jonnie ShandKyddd, a relative of Princess Diana, has produced a book of photographs of artists idling on the scene, drinking and falling about…The very fact that this book of banal and poorly taken photographs was published, and by a major publisher at that, is a register of the extent to which the artists themselves have become a focus for curiosity as personalities, as stars.” Julian Stallabrass, High Art Lite
  • 11. ‘The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living’, Damien Hirst (1991)
  • 12. Stallabrass states that there is certainly no common programme to this art: there are no manifestos, no group statements, and no shared style. Yet there are distinguishing characteristics that he identifies as: • An overtly contemporary flavour to the art, despite it’s ‘Britishness’ is not provincial and thus appeals to an international market • The artists have a new and distinctive relation to the mass media and frequently use materials drawn from mass culture •They present conceptual work in a visually accessible and spectacular form
  • 13. “...a great piece of art can transcend various ephemeral, cultural situations. To give you a clearer idea... I’m not at all interested in issue-based art ... I’m interested in art which has a certain degree of universality and is able to transcend certain cultural and generational differences.” Jay Jopling
  • 15. “Celebrity is about control and distance; it is about adding space to the space that inevitably exists between human beings and remaining apart from the flock. It is about degrees of separation and personal insulation and choosing, as Jeff Koons apparently did, to place the flesh cell of your person inside a second, more unbreachable container tank.” Gordon Burn. (31 August 1996). Hirst world. Guardian (Weekend), pp. 10-14
  • 16.
  • 17. “Art’s about life and the art world’s about money, and money and celebrity are just tiny aspects of life. So if you keep your perspective on that, it’s fine. I think art should be able to deal with celebrity. I don’t think you should ever let celebrity become more important than art but I think it’s a part of it. I think a desire to be famous is a desire to live forever which is very fundamental to art.” Steve Beard. (1-7 September 1977). Nobody’s fool *interview with Damien Hirst]. Big Issue, pp. 12-4.
  • 18. Damien Hirst In and Out of Love (1991) This work was symptomatic of various recent developments on the British art scene. Non-art objects, or beings, brought into contact with traditional fine-art materials and modes of display.
  • 19. Stallabrass has argued that Hirst’s work now functions like a logo for the artist’s personality and that he is able to market his work successfully because of his celebrity status.
  • 20. Gavin Turk Relic (Cave) The original blue plaque from 'Cave' installation encased in a Beuysianvitrine. In the summer of 1991 for his graduation show from the Royal College of Art, the artist exhibited a blue Heritage plaque in an otherwise empty studio which commemorated his own presence as a sculptor. The title Cave refers to an allegorical picture of Plato, which describes a model of perception. A group of prisoners have been chained in a cave since childhood with no experience of reality other than the flickering shadows cast by the people and things moving along a path in front of a fire situated behind them. In the plaque, the artist was represented by a retrospective view of his life.
  • 21. "I wasn't interested in being a celebrity, to the point where my work was trying to criticise celebrity which stops you being able to see the real value of things. Art is about the public. Sometimes art loses value as it obtains such ridiculous [monetary] values. It becomes elite.” Gavin Turk Gavin Turk Pop (1993)
  • 22. Turk highlights the Duchampian idea that questions the connections between artists and the work: “In the beginning I tried to create an artists who had the same name as me. I was interested in the cliché of art, the myth of the artist, stereotyping, all art as types of signature. And at first there was a quite clear and comfortable degree of separation. The artist Gavin Turk had a studio and made art under a certain kind of licence. Now it has become much more problematic to sustain a separation between myself and the artist Gavin Turk.”
  • 23. ‘Sensation’ exhibition at London’s Royal Academy of Art in 1997 was a public airing of the private collector Charles Saatchi, the only major collector of contemporary art in Britain during this period whose dealings affected the entire art market.
  • 24. Marcus Harvey, Marc Quinn, ‘Self’ (1991) ‘Myra’ (1995) Populist, careerist? Does this mean that there was a complicit and wilful avoidance of difficult, theoretical or ideological work?
  • 25. Sam Taylor-Wood, whose photographic self-portrait posing with her trousers down and the words ‘Suck, Fuck, Spank, Wank’, came to sum up the boisterous hedonism of the yBas
  • 26. Hirst’s says of celebrity status: “You’ve got to become a celebrity before you can undermine it, take it apart, show people that there’s no difference between celebrities and real life. Celebrity is a fucking lie. It’s like; I’ll do a magic trick, and I want it to be amazing. But if anyone asks me how to do it, I’ll show them exactly how to do it. I want you to be amazed twice. Once you’re amazed because it seems impossible, and then, you’re amazed because it’s fucking easy. That’s what it’s like.” Damien Hirst quoted by Gordon Burn. (6 Sept 1997) The height of morbid manner. Guardian (Weekend), pp14-21
  • 27. ‘Warhol never claimed his work had any deep value. He openly said all his work was about money. Hirst, on the other hand, will sign a cigarette butt and tell you it’s art.’ Stallabrass

Notas do Editor

  1. When Art and business collide, this is often regarded as selling out, what do you think?What makes an artist a celebrity?Whatother professions can you think of is it seen as “selling out” if you make lots of money from your job. Is itusually just known as “success”.
  2. Objectives:To explore Andy Warhol's legacy through yBa artists who embody the notion of artist as celebrity and commercial brandthe artist's use of persona to build up a myth, artists increasingly embracing consumerism and commerce and their use of mass media long frowned upon by the world of fine art
  3. Taking Warhol's dictate that "Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art. Making money is art and working is art and good business is the best art" as a starting point I will examine how subsequent generations, and in particular the young British artists, embraced the idea despite the popular conviction that it is a betrayal of what fine art should be.
  4. Some, including Hirst and Tracey Emin who were part of the Young British Artists (YBA) movement of the 1980s and 1990s, set out to make money from the very beginning. They made a play for success and for being art stars even at a very early point in their careers
  5. ‘Money is massive,’ he declaredWhat makes Damien Hirst a celebrity?
  6. Manycontemporary artists have shown a fascination with commerce, the media and celebrity. Like Warhol, they have found that marketing and publicity provide a way of engaging with the modern world far beyond the narrow confines of the studio, gallery and museum. There has subsequently been much discussion surrounding the complex relationship between contemporary art, marketing, and the mass media.
  7. And although Warhol is a key precursor to the YBAs and their U.S. peers, there were others before him who embraced the notion of celebrity and of building the myth around the artist, notably Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali.
  8. The emergence of the young British artist was due to a number of factors, firstly these were artists who knew how to use the mass media to create their own brand and persona, and also their subsequent rise coincided with new Labour’s put the ‘Creative Industries’ at the heart of thefuture of Britain, and as such the yBas were packaged alongside the Britpop wave in music.They were once the future of British art. The Young British Artists – YBAs – vowed to shake up, remake and reform the stuffy world of contemporary art. But then along came Cool Britannia and the beginning of the end. Some were seduced by money, others by fame, and before long the YBAs were gone.
  9. Julian Stallabrass in High Art Lite, a somewhat scathing appraisal of the yBa scene refelcts upon the fact that “Jonnie ShandKyddd, a relative of Princess Diana, has produced a book of photographs of artists idling on the scene, drinking and falling about…The very fact that this book of” WHAT HE CONSIDERS TO BE”banal and poorly taken photographs was published, and by a major publisher at that, is a register of the extent to which the artists themselves have become a focus for curiosity as personalities, as stars.”
  10. SO TO RETURN TO THE ONCE ENFANT TERRIBLE OF THE BRITISH ART SCENE Damien Hirst, he was one of the art stars to emerge from the fine art course at Goldsmiths College in South London, which he attended between 1986 and 1989. Conceptual art was a pervasive influence and so as you will recall from our lecture on conceptual art, it was the artist’s ideas that counted most: any medium could be used and the task of making the art works was a secondary matter that could be delegated to assistants once finances permitted. It was due to tutors such as Richard Wentworth, Jon Thompson and Michael Craig-Martin that students came to regard themselves as professional artists and to focus on cracking the commercial gallery system. To promote himself and his friends, Hirst organised a now legendary student show called Freeze (1988)In 1988, at a time when public funding for art was not readily available (and had been reduced by the Thatcher government), a group of 16 artists, were invited by Hirst to take part in the exhibition. Most of the commercial galleries in London showed a lack of interest in Hirst's project at the time, which led to the show being held in a Docklands warehouse. The event resonated with the 'Acid House' warehouse rave scene prevalent at the time, and drew significant publicity by the connection. It also gave rise to a huge interest on the part of many artists in being curators. Suddenly it seemed Hirst had single handedly created a new career-path and possibility for unknown artists to put a cool-sounding new job-title on their resumés and CVs. Artist-run exhibition spaces and galleries sprang up in the mid 1990's in London based on this idea.
  11. The label yBa turned out to be a powerful brand and marketing tool, but of course it concealed huge diversity. The art writerJulian Stallabrass prefers the more sarcastic and disparaging label “High Art Lite” to the acronymyBAIn his book Stallabrass critiques the lack of complexity in the work of the young British artists.Stallabrass states that there is certainly no common programme to this art: there are no manifestos, no group statements, and no shared style. Yet there are distinguishing characteristics that he identifies as: An overtly contemporary flavour to the art, despite it’s ‘Britishness’ is not provincial and thus appeals to an international market The artists have a new and distinctive relation to the mass media and frequently use materials drawn from mass cultureThey present conceptual work in a visually accessible and spectacular form
  12. To Take Stallabrass’s point that: An overtly contemporary flavour to the art, despite it’s ‘Britishness’ is not provincial and thus appeals to an international market Validated by Jay Jopling:“...a great piece of art can transcend various ephemeral, cultural situations. To give you a clearer idea... I’m not at all interested in issue-based art ... I’m interested in art which has a certain degree of universality and is able to transcend certain cultural and generational differences.”
  13. Stallabrass“To court a wider audience, high art lite took on an accessible veneer, building in references and forms that people without specialist knowledge would understand – and even sometimes , in its use if mass culture, incorporating material that those with specialist knowledge would generally not understand…” (p9)The opening of The Tate Modern,London in May 2000, further fueled the spread of enthusiasm for the work of the yBa artists.One particular artists involved in both the 'Freeze' and 'Sensation' exhibitions was Tracey Emin. Her later work entitled 'My Bed' caused a great deal of shock, when shortlisted for the 1999 Turner prize. Charles Saatchi later bought this piece for £150,000.In 1999 Emin was shortlisted for the prestigious Turner Prize, causing a raging controversy in the art world over her piece entitled, "My Bed." Critics were scathing in their censure of the piece, but it did have its supporter as well. "My Bed" (Figure 4) was a double bed, ostensibly Emin's actual bed in which she had lain for four days while contemplating suicide. The bed had no frame and was instead a mattress laid atop a box made of wood. The soiled sheets are ripped halfway off, exposing the striped ticking of the mattress beneath. A small bedside table rests on a blue, soiled rug next to the bed. On the table is an ashtray overflowing with cigarette butts as well as photographs, over- the- counter medications and condoms. The rug is also strewn with other artifacts from Emin's life, including her dirty, bloodied underwear, Polaroid photographs, stuffed animals, a tube of KY Jelly, empty cigarette cartons, crumpled papers, used condoms and empty vodka bottles. The final touch is a rope noose hanging above the bed, a silent testament to Emin's pain and narcissistic exhibitionism. It is not only Emin's artwork that evokes pop culture and the world of celebrity. For Tracey Emin has not been content to remain within the sphere of the art world, but has become a demi-celebrity herself.
  14. What really made Damien Hirst famous far beyond the art world were shock-horror sculptural installations using dead animals— cows, lambs, fish and sharks—presented whole or sliced into parts, preserved in formaldehyde in large vitrines. (The animals were "presented", not "re-presented"; hence, no modelling skills were required. Hirst’s aim was to introduce reality into art directly, not to depict it.) As Hirst pointed out, humans have often killed animals in order to look at them (but was this any reason to continue the practice?). These works resembled exhibits found in natural history museums and were easy to understand and so became popular but they also attracted vandals, cartoonists, and parodic advertisements and angry protests by animal rights activists. Damien Hirst’s steel and glass vitrines had the rational structure and polished finish of minimal art but inside was dead flesh. The vitrines that protected viewers from the smells of corpses and chemicals were paradoxical because they enabled viewers to see inside but not to enter, smell or touch. Gordon Burn discerned a connection with celebrity:  “Celebrity is about control and distance; it is about adding space to the space that inevitably exists between human beings and remaining apart from the flock. It is about degrees of separation and personal insulation and choosing, as Jeff Koons apparently did, to place the flesh cell of your person inside a second, more unbreachable container tank.”
  15. Saatchi was Hirst’s main patron and ensured that his favourite received plenty of press coverage. Hirst also had a flair for self-promotion and marketing. Like his patron, he was an entrepreneur who curated mixed exhibitions with absurd titles and undertook a variety of business ventures.
  16. When giving interviews Damien Hirst tends to make contradictory statements and admits his opinions may be different the next day so any quotes must be read with caution. About art, fame and celebrity, Hirst has remarked:“Art’s about life and the art world’s about money, and money and celebrity are just tiny aspects of life. So if you keep your perspective on that, it’s fine. I think art should be able to deal with celebrity. I don’t think you should ever let celebrity become more important than art but I think it’s a part of it. I think a desire to be famous is a desire to live forever which is very fundamental to art.”
  17. In and Out of Love (1991) In this work canvases were hung with chrysalises in a closed room; the butterflies, hatched, fed off sugared water, flew, bred and died – some inadvertedly by art lovers. In a separate room, their bodies were painted into the bright colours of other canvases.  The work was symptomatic of various recent developments on the British art scene. Non-art objects, or beings, brought into contact with traditional fine-art materials and modes of display, such as the gallery and private views.
  18. like Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst was willing to endorse products, such as Absolut Vodka, and to make advertisements for billboards and television, to direct pop music videos (Country House for Blur) and to design record cover albumsStallabrass has argued that Hirst’s work now functions like a logo for the artist’s personality and that he is able to market his work successfully because of his celebrity status.Hirst: work and identity are not strictly seperable, he is the pioneer of this approach and its most prominent exponent.(This is different from the celebrity artists enjoyed by British artists in the past, there have of course been previous isolated examples in Britain and the USA) Hirst: unusually for a contemporary artist receives a great deal of mass media attention and not for the usual reason that contemporary art gathered column inches in the past, that public money has been wasted on it. He is as much known for his lifestyle as for his art and he takes care to ensure they are thoroughly entangled.
  19. In the summer of 1991 for his graduation show from the Royal College of Art, the artist exhibited a blue Heritage plaque in an otherwise empty studio which commemorated his own presence as a sculptor. The title Cave refers to an allegorical picture of Plato, which describes a model of perception. A group of prisoners have been chained in a cave since childhood with no experience of reality other than the flickering shadows cast by the people and things moving along a path in front of a fire situated behind them. In the plaque, the artist was represented by a retrospective view of his life.
  20. A waxwork portrait of Gavin Turk as Sid Vicious singing Sinatra’s My Way in The Rock n’Roll Swindle, in the pose of Elvis playing the part of a cowboy in a movie as a silk screen by Andy Warhol…"I wasn't interested in being a celebrity, to the point where my work was trying to criticise celebrity which stops you being able to see the real value of things. Art is about the public. Sometimes art loses value as it obtains such ridiculous [monetary] values. It becomes elite."
  21. Turk highlights the Duchampian idea that questions the connections between artists and the work:“In the beginning I tried to create an artists who had the same name as me. I was interested in the cliché of art, the myth of the artist, stereotyping, all art as types of signature. And at first there was a quite clear and comfortable degree of separation. The artist Gavin Turk had a studio and made art under a certain kind of licence. Now it has become much more problematic to sustain a separation between myself and the artist Gavin Turk.”
  22. ‘Sensation’ exhibition at London’s Royal Academy of Art in 1997 was a public airing of the private collector Charles Saatchi, the only major collector of contemporary art in Britain during this period whose dealings affected the entire art market.
  23. Populist, careerist? Does this mean that there was a complicit and wilful avoidance of difficult, theoretical or ideological work?Self promotionThe yBas are credited with the revival of the knowing ‘shock’ tactic.MARCUS HARVEY and his painting of Myra Hindley, a serial killer whose victims were young children. “Myra” is made from the hand prints of a child whose age matched those of Hindley's victims. The juxtaposition of opposites- of life and death, innocence and corruption- creates unbearable poignancy. This work provoked such outrage when it was shown in “ Sensation” in 1997 that it was splattered with eggs and ink. Harvey is not glorifying the monster but asking how a set of features becomes an icon of evil.MARC QUINNGained instant notoriety with a self-portrait: “Self” (1991) . It consists of nine pints of blood (that is the amount contained in a human body) taken from his veins over a period of five months, poured into a cast of his features and frozen solid. Instead of conferring immortality like a portrait n stone or marble would, “Self” is fundamentally unstable. “Dependent on a life-support system it emphasizes the fragility and transience of life. Unplug the refrigerator unit and the sculpture would disappear.yBa, a media confection, elaborately crafted? Did it lack coherence other than the drive to ride the wave of attention? It seems to have its roots in art education and in responses to the recession, which from the 1990s put the art market into prolonged hibernation.A product of 90s recession; commercial galleries scaled down, relocated or closed; career and financial expectations of artists changed; empty premises, warehouses.
  24. Sam Taylor-Wood, whose photographic self-portrait posing with her trousers down and the words ‘Suck, Fuck, Spank, Wank’, came to sum up the boisterous hedonism of the YBAs
  25. Hirst’s says of celebrity status: “You’ve got to become a celebrity before you can undermine it, take it apart, show people that there’s no difference between celebrities and real life. Celebrity is a fucking lie. It’s like; I’ll do a magic trick, and I want it to be amazing. But if anyone asks me how to do it, I’ll show them exactly how to do it. I want you to be amazed twice. Once you’re amazed because it seems impossible, and then, you’re amazed because it’s fucking easy. That’s what it’s like.”Damien Hirst quoted by Gordon Burn. (6 Sept 1997) The height of morbid manner. Guardian (Weekend), pp14-21
  26. Artists have always been obsessed with money, from Leonardo da Vinci’s patronage by the Medici, to Salvador Dali being dubbed ‘Avida Dollars’ by a bitter André Breton in 1939. Andy Warhol said that ‘Good business is the best art’; his spiritual love child is the banker turned artist Jeff Koons, famous for the curio-kitsch he peddles to the super-rich, and a big hero to both Hirst and Emin. But Stallabrass points out that Hirst differs from Warhol in one major respect: ‘Warhol never claimed his work had any deep value. He openly said all his work was about money. Hirst, on the other hand, will sign a cigarette butt and tell you it’s art.’In 2008, hours before the world’s financial crash, he sold an entire show at Sotheby’s for £111 million