spidey
New Member
🗨️ 173
👍🏻 0
May 2007
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by spidey on Jun 3, 2007 19:06:51 GMT 1, I like the skull with diamonds. Does anyone know who he has copied this time?
Its obvious he loves the Terminator Movies!!!!
I like the skull with diamonds. Does anyone know who he has copied this time? Its obvious he loves the Terminator Movies!!!!
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by atkuefler on Jun 4, 2007 13:44:17 GMT 1, Anyone on here planning on buying any of the prints? I am considering the small print.
Anyone on here planning on buying any of the prints? I am considering the small print.
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by zippyblip on Jun 4, 2007 17:16:24 GMT 1, Hi folks
I went to see the Masons yard show yesterday afternoon.
I have to say I really enjoyed it - and I'm not a Hirst fan- the pieces are all pretty interesting - sliced shark et al.
The skull.....Security was VERY heavy; only ten allowed in at a time and only a few minutes in the presence. Lots of edgy guards around. In the 'flesh' I have to say it is awesome. Its in a totally black room, at head height and lit up by spots from the ceiling- which are all low powered so it really is only the skull that lights up. Its absolutely coated with the diamonds- including the eye sockets.
Against my better judgment I think Hirst has achieved something here, I can't speak for whether he has nicked the idea or not, but I was really blown away.
Worth a trip- I guess once it sells it will disappear into a private collection forever.
Regarding the print I was thinking of buying a small one.....but a bit in two minds as I really don't know if its worth the asking price......?
Thanks for listening. ;D ;D ;D
Hi folks
I went to see the Masons yard show yesterday afternoon.
I have to say I really enjoyed it - and I'm not a Hirst fan- the pieces are all pretty interesting - sliced shark et al.
The skull.....Security was VERY heavy; only ten allowed in at a time and only a few minutes in the presence. Lots of edgy guards around. In the 'flesh' I have to say it is awesome. Its in a totally black room, at head height and lit up by spots from the ceiling- which are all low powered so it really is only the skull that lights up. Its absolutely coated with the diamonds- including the eye sockets.
Against my better judgment I think Hirst has achieved something here, I can't speak for whether he has nicked the idea or not, but I was really blown away.
Worth a trip- I guess once it sells it will disappear into a private collection forever.
Regarding the print I was thinking of buying a small one.....but a bit in two minds as I really don't know if its worth the asking price......?
Thanks for listening. ;D ;D ;D
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by corblimeylimey on Jun 4, 2007 17:36:44 GMT 1, 8 editions now available, the total cost (if I've hit all the right buttons on my calculator) of every edition is a staggering £21,600,000 + Vat = £25,380,000
8 editions now available, the total cost (if I've hit all the right buttons on my calculator) of every edition is a staggering £21,600,000 + Vat = £25,380,000
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by atkuefler on Jun 4, 2007 17:41:04 GMT 1, Hirst is a much better business man than artist?
Hirst is a much better business man than artist?
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by corblimeylimey on Jun 4, 2007 17:52:14 GMT 1, Hirst is a much better business man than artist?
His Pharmacy wasn't a good business idea and I find it quite odd he's put a restaurant in Ilfracombe, a place I've only visited once in spite of living in Devon.
Ilfracombe is not really a place you'd bother visiting twice, although I might make an exception just because his restaurant wasn't there when I visited.
Hirst is a much better business man than artist? His Pharmacy wasn't a good business idea and I find it quite odd he's put a restaurant in Ilfracombe, a place I've only visited once in spite of living in Devon. Ilfracombe is not really a place you'd bother visiting twice, although I might make an exception just because his restaurant wasn't there when I visited.
|
|
|
goffy
Junior Member
🗨️ 1,401
👍🏻 0
November 2006
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by goffy on Jun 4, 2007 18:01:04 GMT 1, I was going to buy that diamond skull, had it in my basket and everything, but in the end I decided to let it go. Did anyone here pick it up?
I was going to buy that diamond skull, had it in my basket and everything, but in the end I decided to let it go. Did anyone here pick it up?
|
|
jam
Junior Member
🗨️ 1,629
👍🏻 31
November 2006
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by jam on Jun 4, 2007 18:04:48 GMT 1, I was going to buy that diamond skull, had it in my basket and everything, but in the end I decided to let it go. Did anyone here pick it up?
Bahhh... I wish you would have said you were letting it go so I could have it. Oh well... maybe I will get one on the next release! ;D
I was going to buy that diamond skull, had it in my basket and everything, but in the end I decided to let it go. Did anyone here pick it up? Bahhh... I wish you would have said you were letting it go so I could have it. Oh well... maybe I will get one on the next release! ;D
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by zippyblip on Jun 4, 2007 18:09:04 GMT 1, Funny enough I used to quite like Pharmacy when it first opened, during the week you could have a meal upstairs and then relocate for cocktails downstairs. It had a good layout with the bar in a circle in the middle - all a bit different.
Then they redesigned it and it lost all its charm- it just felt like another Notting Hill drinking den with not much to offer - bar at one end, no seating, might as well be in All bar One.......
Now its a Marks and Spencers food store. So there you go.
By the way I haven't censored the work cocktail, apparently the board thinks its offensive. Guess this is cause it has the word cock in it, by which I guess the computer thinks I mean 'p***s'. Unlike what I do mean - 'hammered'.
Funny enough I used to quite like Pharmacy when it first opened, during the week you could have a meal upstairs and then relocate for cocktails downstairs. It had a good layout with the bar in a circle in the middle - all a bit different. Then they redesigned it and it lost all its charm- it just felt like another Notting Hill drinking den with not much to offer - bar at one end, no seating, might as well be in All bar One....... Now its a Marks and Spencers food store. So there you go. By the way I haven't censored the work cocktail, apparently the board thinks its offensive. Guess this is cause it has the word cock in it, by which I guess the computer thinks I mean 'p***s'. Unlike what I do mean - 'hammered'.
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by atkuefler on Jun 5, 2007 18:09:02 GMT 1, Anyone pick up any of these prints?
Anyone pick up any of these prints?
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by fiddypence on Jun 6, 2007 13:13:22 GMT 1, Well it's due to open on the 3rd at the White Cube (apologies if anyone else has already posted but i couldn't see a thread anywhere) . I just saw a preview on the BBC lunchtime news of Damien's diamond encrusted skull, it looks pretty amazing, but a little out of my price range for GBP50 Million Anyone going to get an opportunity to see it in the flesh so to speak..? www.whitecube.com/exhibitions/beyond_belief/
Just to let eveyone know, the skull is not actually at the white cube but over in green park.
Well it's due to open on the 3rd at the White Cube (apologies if anyone else has already posted but i couldn't see a thread anywhere) . I just saw a preview on the BBC lunchtime news of Damien's diamond encrusted skull, it looks pretty amazing, but a little out of my price range for GBP50 Million Anyone going to get an opportunity to see it in the flesh so to speak..? www.whitecube.com/exhibitions/beyond_belief/Just to let eveyone know, the skull is not actually at the white cube but over in green park.
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by fiddypence on Jun 7, 2007 1:10:35 GMT 1, Well it's due to open on the 3rd at the White Cube (apologies if anyone else has already posted but i couldn't see a thread anywhere) . I just saw a preview on the BBC lunchtime news of Damien's diamond encrusted skull, it looks pretty amazing, but a little out of my price range for GBP50 Million Anyone going to get an opportunity to see it in the flesh so to speak..? www.whitecube.com/exhibitions/beyond_belief/Ive just got back from having a look at this guys - managed to go this afternoon to see the exhibition and the skull. The pieces are amazing, including the sharks and the sheep, but the skull is out of this world. Its smaller than you would think but the detailing is exquisite. The diamonds stretch to the inside of the skull as well. I did not think i would be that impressed but its mindblowing!! Everyone get down there and see it now at the white cube in mayfair!!!
Well it's due to open on the 3rd at the White Cube (apologies if anyone else has already posted but i couldn't see a thread anywhere) . I just saw a preview on the BBC lunchtime news of Damien's diamond encrusted skull, it looks pretty amazing, but a little out of my price range for GBP50 Million Anyone going to get an opportunity to see it in the flesh so to speak..? www.whitecube.com/exhibitions/beyond_belief/Ive just got back from having a look at this guys - managed to go this afternoon to see the exhibition and the skull. The pieces are amazing, including the sharks and the sheep, but the skull is out of this world. Its smaller than you would think but the detailing is exquisite. The diamonds stretch to the inside of the skull as well. I did not think i would be that impressed but its mindblowing!! Everyone get down there and see it now at the white cube in mayfair!!!
|
|
ell
New Member
🗨️ 174
👍🏻 0
May 2007
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by ell on Jun 7, 2007 15:49:12 GMT 1, i'm hopefully going to go on at the end of june when im in london
i'm hopefully going to go on at the end of june when im in london
|
|
bond
New Member
🗨️ 958
👍🏻 0
January 2007
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by bond on Jun 12, 2007 13:08:05 GMT 1, looks like i was too late then !!
news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1270020,00.html
|
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by mcnuts on Jun 12, 2007 13:25:40 GMT 1,
GM likes skull? surpirse, surpirse.
GM likes skull? surpirse, surpirse.
|
|
bond
New Member
🗨️ 958
👍🏻 0
January 2007
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by bond on Jun 12, 2007 13:33:36 GMT 1, He must like the way Hirst got it stoned !!!!! ;D ;D
He must like the way Hirst got it stoned !!!!! ;D ;D
|
|
jam
Junior Member
🗨️ 1,629
👍🏻 31
November 2006
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by jam on Aug 31, 2007 8:42:12 GMT 1, August 31, 2007 Hirst's diamond-encrusted skull goes to unknown investors for £50m
entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/visual_arts/article2356852.ece
Damien Hirst’s diamond-encrusted cast of a human skull has been bought by a group of anonymous investors for its asking price of £50 million, the artist’s representatives claimed yesterday.
It is, by a huge margin, the most paid for a work by a living artist.
Entitled For the Love of God, the skull was first displayed at the White Cube Gallery in Mayfair, Central London, in June where thousands queued for a two-minute viewing in a high-security darkened chamber.
Studded with more than 8,500 ethically sourced diamonds, it has been variously described as “an anthropomorphised disco ball”, “the first 21st-century work of art”, “a cosmic wonder”, “the vulgar embodiment of modern materialism” and, by Hirst himself, as “quite bling”.
Related Links Diamond Damien will scoop £180m My old friend Damien stole my skull idea Millions to spend and bare walls to fill His aim, he said at the unveiling, was to come up with “the maximum celebration you could make against death”.
Typically, Hirst’s own role in the creation of the object was conceptual rather than hands-on. It was also financial — he funded most of the £15 million project out of his personal fortune, estimated at £130 million. He could receive 75 per cent of the proceeds of the sale.
Frank Dunphy, Hirst’s business manager, said that the full $100 million (£50 million) price of the artwork would be paid in cash. He denied reports in The Art Newspaper that the price had been discounted to £38 million. As part of the deal, the buyers will be required to show the skull for two or three years in museums around the world, he added.
Laurence Graff, the London jeweller and art collector, said that the buyers were probably not “diamond people”, because the skull’s price was so much higher than the value of the diamond content. Graff looked at the skull when it was on show but decided not to buy it. “I’m in the diamond business and I would only be interested in diamonds at diamond prices,” he said.
The deal sets the seal on an extraordinary summer for Hirst, 42, that has established him as a cash-generator without parallel in the contemporary-art market.
It began in June when his Lullaby Spring, a medical cabinet with pills mounted on razor blades, sold at Sotheby’s for £9.6 million, a record for a living artist’s work at auction.
Then a pair of exhibitions of his work at the White Cube galleries in Mayfair and Hoxton, East London, raised £130 million for Hirst and Jay Jopling, his London dealer.
Nothing, however, has matched the impact and range of responses generated by For the Love of God.
Hirst bought the “perfectly shaped” skull from an Islington taxidermy shop two years ago. Radiocarbon analysis suggested that it had probably belonged to a European man who died in his mid-thirties in the 18th or early 19th century.
Bentley & Skinner, the Hatton Garden jewellers, built a life-size cast of the skull from 32 platinum plates and combed the world market for the 8,601 diamonds required to cover it. They found it difficult to source so many precious stones without inflating the price of diamonds on the open market.
The platinum plates were hand-lasered with thousands of holes and the diamonds, which have a total weight of 1,106.18 carats, were individually set. They include a 52.4 carat “internally flawless, light, fancy pink, brilliant-cut diamond” which is mounted in the middle of the forehead.
A spokeswoman for White Cube said that Hirst had “retained a participation in the work, which means that he can ensure that it is made available to a broader audience and displayed internationally”.
Hirst, who has a home in Mexico, said that he had been inspired by Aztec skulls covered with turquoises. But John LeKay, a London artist based in New York, told The Times in June that he had been covering soap and wax skulls with crystals since 1993 and that Hirst had stolen his idea.
Hirst, who was raised in Leeds and educated at Goldsmiths College, London, has polarised opinion on his march to the top of the art world. Several other artists besides LeKay have claimed that Hirst has copied their ideas. He responds that artists have always borrowed from each other. His detractors belittle his level of input into the works made in his name, citing his staff of more than 100 working in factories in London and Gloucestershire. His supporters point out that many great artists, from Rubens to Andy Warhol, operated a similar system.
Most of all, there is disagreement over whether Hirst’s work justifies the prices it commands. He says: “An artwork is only worth what the next guy is going to pay for it.”
August 31, 2007 Hirst's diamond-encrusted skull goes to unknown investors for £50m entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/visual_arts/article2356852.eceDamien Hirst’s diamond-encrusted cast of a human skull has been bought by a group of anonymous investors for its asking price of £50 million, the artist’s representatives claimed yesterday. It is, by a huge margin, the most paid for a work by a living artist. Entitled For the Love of God, the skull was first displayed at the White Cube Gallery in Mayfair, Central London, in June where thousands queued for a two-minute viewing in a high-security darkened chamber. Studded with more than 8,500 ethically sourced diamonds, it has been variously described as “an anthropomorphised disco ball”, “the first 21st-century work of art”, “a cosmic wonder”, “the vulgar embodiment of modern materialism” and, by Hirst himself, as “quite bling”. Related Links Diamond Damien will scoop £180m My old friend Damien stole my skull idea Millions to spend and bare walls to fill His aim, he said at the unveiling, was to come up with “the maximum celebration you could make against death”. Typically, Hirst’s own role in the creation of the object was conceptual rather than hands-on. It was also financial — he funded most of the £15 million project out of his personal fortune, estimated at £130 million. He could receive 75 per cent of the proceeds of the sale. Frank Dunphy, Hirst’s business manager, said that the full $100 million (£50 million) price of the artwork would be paid in cash. He denied reports in The Art Newspaper that the price had been discounted to £38 million. As part of the deal, the buyers will be required to show the skull for two or three years in museums around the world, he added. Laurence Graff, the London jeweller and art collector, said that the buyers were probably not “diamond people”, because the skull’s price was so much higher than the value of the diamond content. Graff looked at the skull when it was on show but decided not to buy it. “I’m in the diamond business and I would only be interested in diamonds at diamond prices,” he said. The deal sets the seal on an extraordinary summer for Hirst, 42, that has established him as a cash-generator without parallel in the contemporary-art market. It began in June when his Lullaby Spring, a medical cabinet with pills mounted on razor blades, sold at Sotheby’s for £9.6 million, a record for a living artist’s work at auction. Then a pair of exhibitions of his work at the White Cube galleries in Mayfair and Hoxton, East London, raised £130 million for Hirst and Jay Jopling, his London dealer. Nothing, however, has matched the impact and range of responses generated by For the Love of God. Hirst bought the “perfectly shaped” skull from an Islington taxidermy shop two years ago. Radiocarbon analysis suggested that it had probably belonged to a European man who died in his mid-thirties in the 18th or early 19th century. Bentley & Skinner, the Hatton Garden jewellers, built a life-size cast of the skull from 32 platinum plates and combed the world market for the 8,601 diamonds required to cover it. They found it difficult to source so many precious stones without inflating the price of diamonds on the open market. The platinum plates were hand-lasered with thousands of holes and the diamonds, which have a total weight of 1,106.18 carats, were individually set. They include a 52.4 carat “internally flawless, light, fancy pink, brilliant-cut diamond” which is mounted in the middle of the forehead. A spokeswoman for White Cube said that Hirst had “retained a participation in the work, which means that he can ensure that it is made available to a broader audience and displayed internationally”. Hirst, who has a home in Mexico, said that he had been inspired by Aztec skulls covered with turquoises. But John LeKay, a London artist based in New York, told The Times in June that he had been covering soap and wax skulls with crystals since 1993 and that Hirst had stolen his idea. Hirst, who was raised in Leeds and educated at Goldsmiths College, London, has polarised opinion on his march to the top of the art world. Several other artists besides LeKay have claimed that Hirst has copied their ideas. He responds that artists have always borrowed from each other. His detractors belittle his level of input into the works made in his name, citing his staff of more than 100 working in factories in London and Gloucestershire. His supporters point out that many great artists, from Rubens to Andy Warhol, operated a similar system. Most of all, there is disagreement over whether Hirst’s work justifies the prices it commands. He says: “An artwork is only worth what the next guy is going to pay for it.”
|
|
|
Damien Hirst For the Love of God aka Diamond Skull, by Daniel Silk on Jul 25, 2024 14:50:53 GMT 1, Is that the real Skull or just a reproduction? I mean do they actually let the real thing out for exhibition like that? Doesn't look very secure or well displayed for something so important.
Is that the real Skull or just a reproduction? I mean do they actually let the real thing out for exhibition like that? Doesn't look very secure or well displayed for something so important.
|
|