Damien Hirst / Michael Joo
01 May - 14 August 2010
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| © Michael Joo
Tree, 2001
Oak, stainless steel
160 x 160 x 1303 cm, 63 x 63 x 513 inches |
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DAMIEN HIRST / MICHAEL JOO
"Have You Ever Really Looked at the Sun?"
May 1 - August 14, 2010
Haunch of Venison Berlin is delighted to announce 'Have You Ever Really
Looked at the Sun?' a two person exhibition by American artist Michael
Joo (b.1966) and British artist Damien Hirst (b.1965). The exhibition
opens on 1 May and continues through 14 August 2010.
'Have You Ever Really Looked at the Sun?' is a unique collaboration
between the two artists, who met in Cologne in 1991 and have remained
close friends since that time. Engaged in a continuous, twenty-year
discourse about their individual artistic practices, this marks the
first time Joo and Hirst have worked together to realise a full-scale
joint exhibition. 'Have You Ever Really Looked at the Sun? 'will feature
new, especially conceived sculptures and installations, as well as
seminal paintings and sculptures from Joo and Hirst.
Since gaining international attention after showing in the exhibition
'Some Went Mad, Some Ran Away' at the Serpentine Gallery in London in
1995, Joo has employed a highly personal language in the creation of his
art to express ideas about identity, nature and the body. In key works
like 'Improved Rack (Elk #18) (2010), a wall-mounted sculpture of elk
antlers Joo plays on the traditional presentation of the hunter's trophy
by cutting the antlers into segments and extending them with metal
rods. Other major works are a painted pink, bronze life-size sculpture
of a zebra, Doppelganger (Pink Rocinante) (2009) and a new group of
colorful paintings of quartz crystals on shaped aluminum panels. Joo
will also premier a sculptural homage to Martin Kippenberger involving a
framework of ice and prehistoric Irish Elk antlers.
In dialogue with Joo's works, Hirst brings together signature sculptures
and paintings for which he has become known. Included in the exhibition
are 'The Incredible Journey' (2008), a zebra suspended in formaldehyde
in a white painted steel tank and 'The Black Sheep With The Golden
Horns' (divided) (2009), another major formaldehyde work shown here for
the first time. Also on view are Har Megiddo (2008), a monumental
circular fly painting as well as The Dark Continent (2010), a stainless
steel medicine cabinet stacked with black pills, behind glass.
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