Damien Hirst: Mandalas, White Cube review ★★★★★

Damien Hirst's first major London solo exhibition in seven years comes to White Cube Gallery, Mason's Yard

Damien Hirst, Noble Path, 2019, © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved, DACS 2019. Photo © Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd. Courtesy White Cube
Beauty, transience and death – this is what we've come to expect from Damien Hirst's work. The artist whose shadow would make young lambs quiver in their pens has never been afraid to exploit his viewers’ squeamishness in forcing them to confront these themes by employing human skulls and animal cadavers as shocking memento mori. However, in Hirst’s ‘lighter’ works, such as his spin paintings, we see a more celebratory mood and a recurring fascination towards the arbitrariness and energy of life.


Damien Hirst, Governance, 2019, © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. All rights reserved, DACS 2019. Photo © Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd. Courtesy White Cube

A new solo exhibition at the White Cube Mason’s Yard presents an unusual cross between Hirst the Grim Reaper and Hirst the mystic aesthete. In Mandalas, butterflies are the artist's latest victims. He has extracted thousands of real wings and arranged them in concentric circles to evoke the image of a mandala, a spiritual art object used as a meditative aide in Buddhist, Hindu, Jain and Shinto cultures.

There can be no denying that these works are visually seductive. Some hang in a blaze of colour with iridescent wings radiating off the walls whilst others are near-black and cast a velvety sheen. The effect of their size is like that of a Rothko. They engulf you and pull you into receding centre, such is the clever trompe-l'œil effect of their hypnotic patterns.

However, where some might see life-affirming works that nod to nature's fragile beauty, others might only see a graveyard. At a time when many artists are using their practice to draw attention to environmental issues, a room filled with vitrines of amputated wings may be seen as off-colour as a khaki-clad hunter parading into the gallery with a lion carcass in tow. The general sense of outdatedness also comes from the works' strange Age of Enlightenment undertones as the petrified butterflies recall stuffy lepidoptera collections that one might find in a forgotten Wunderkammer. The exhibition as a whole sits uncomfortably with the reference to Eastern philosophies, which presumably would be at odds with such a gratuitous destruction of nature. Once again, Hirst has succeeded in creating divisive works which might set some hearts aflutter, but evoke the winged Angel of Death for others.
TRY CULTURE WHISPER
Receive free tickets & insider tips to unlock the best of London — direct to your inbox

What Damien Hirst: Mandalas, White Cube review
Where White Cube Mason's Yard, 25-26 Mason's Yard , London, SW1Y 6BU | MAP
Nearest tube Piccadilly Circus (underground)
When 20 Sep 19 – 02 Nov 19, 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM
Price £ free
Website Click here for more information




You may also like: