Damien Hirst, “Cherry Blossoms” - The Documentary Film

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • To extend the sensitive experience of the exhibition visit, Damien Hirst and the Fondation Cartier have made a documentary film, featuring the artist speaking in the privacy of his studio, where he reveals how he conceived of and created the "Cherry Blossoms" paintings.
    Wearing sneakers and covered in paint, Hirst opens the doors to his light flooded London studio on the Thames to the sounds of rock music. The camera films the artist’s dance as he moves from one canvas to the other, continually returning to paintings he can’t quite manage to finish, diving into a blank canvas until it is entirely covered in paint, then piling up his paintings on top of each other.
    Wide-angle static shots show Hirst sitting in his legendary Chesterfield armchair, silently looking at his paintings; energetically throwing paint in the style of Jackson Pollock; or conscientiously applying it in dabs, in the way of Georges Seurat.
    Close-up shots reveal the thick textures, drips and layers of sharp colours composing his paintings.
    Filmed over the course of a year, these rare images offer an immersion into the heart of Hirst’s creative process, providing keys to understand his work. Interviewed by the art historian and writer Tim Marlow,
    Hirst reveals the exhilarated pleasure of his relationship
    to painting, and his career-long investigation into colour.
    Production : Fondation pour l’art contemporain
    Réalisation : HENI, Damien Hirst, Fondation Cartier
    pour l’art contemporain

Комментарии • 142

  • @NEONMOTORFAIRY
    @NEONMOTORFAIRY Год назад +6

    The interviewer articulates his thoughts excellently.

  • @lisengel2498
    @lisengel2498 3 года назад +9

    I love the vibrational beauty of these beautifull cherries - for me its not just the fusion of abstract- figurative its like a cantillation of beautifull vibrations of life and light and love - and what an amazing scale giving you feeling of floating in space - 💗🌸

    • @BlowinFree
      @BlowinFree 2 года назад +3

      I’ve never heard so much guff in my life

  • @IngridSaybe
    @IngridSaybe 7 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing. How Nature appeared. From death to gardens or trees. I must say thanks to the Fondation Cartier, the artist and interviewer.

  • @gabebranch4381
    @gabebranch4381 2 года назад +5

    Truly beautiful , transcendent even, it saddens me that the collection won’t stay together.

  • @grahams1609
    @grahams1609 11 месяцев назад +4

    The most incredible facet of Hirst is how he gets away with it.

  • @ac8762
    @ac8762 3 года назад +5

    A new appreciation for this artist, thank you

  • @ArtHistoryProfessor
    @ArtHistoryProfessor 2 года назад +2

    Whether you like legendary YBA Damien Hirst (b. 1965) or not (and I do)-his boldly creative imprimatura on contemporary art has been monumental since the late 1980s. His work is often viewed as being overtly morbid and obsessively fixated with ideas that solely revolve around death and decay.
    In actuality, nothing could be further from the truth. Instead, his work examines many of the starker perils and pitfalls of our existence as human beings-chief amongst those are our ongoing compulsive addictions-albeit to prescription drugs and/or the decadent excesses of our insatiable desire to want more of everything.
    Thus, simply put, Damien Hirst reminds us-via his use of adroitly conceptual dialogue-that life and death are, in fact, an inextricably convergent tapestry of sorts. Therefore, through his signature use of controversial objects, e.g., the severed cadavers of dead animals and preserved insects, he forcibly compels us to accept these universal truths that lie at the foundational core of this symbiotic relationship.

  • @johnoh7796
    @johnoh7796 3 года назад +12

    I just cannot accept this kind of art

    • @ありちゃん-t5k
      @ありちゃん-t5k 2 года назад +2

      I just saw it today in Tokyo and thought it was absolutely kitsch. No artistic merit. Cheery-blossoms painted in that way has been done to death already

    • @catherinemansoor7264
      @catherinemansoor7264 7 месяцев назад

      so sad
      @@ありちゃん-t5k

  • @PDN11141
    @PDN11141 3 года назад +1

    Cherries Blossoms do have a splat effect, joyful, I love the leaves too, I love the way paint talks!.

  • @boozebiskwhiskey7422
    @boozebiskwhiskey7422 Год назад +7

    This is one of the best paintings of Hirst when he's not scamming people.

    • @JC-vg5gl
      @JC-vg5gl Год назад +1

      i mean i disagree but i do like hirst

  • @louizeantiplastique4581
    @louizeantiplastique4581 3 года назад +5

    I am at art school in south of france. I started painting trees in the summer. I like how he said that trees are abstract and figurative at the same time, or something like that. That’s what I feel too :) thx for this, references for school 🤙🏽🤙🏽

    • @lepekhovm
      @lepekhovm 3 года назад +2

      I live in Menton. Can you do some paintings for me?

  • @terrencepearson7722
    @terrencepearson7722 3 года назад +8

    don't write documentary in the title if its a interview

  • @Anisettedelsol
    @Anisettedelsol 3 года назад +1

    Il a changé... de la mort à la vie... 👍
    🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸Félicitations ! 🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸

  • @ChristopheHoullier
    @ChristopheHoullier 2 года назад +4

    Un aveu troublant : Venir à la peinture après l'avoir si longtemps méprisé ; jamais résister, toujours suivre le mouvement.
    Au début, je pensais naïvement que Hirst était sincère dans sa peinture et que le communiqué de presse accompagnant son exposition était une manière d’arrondir les angles pour sa cour nourrie à l’art conceptuel (bref encore une façon de faire passer des vessies pour des lanternes). Par l’emploi des mots « ironie joyeuse », j’y voyais une manière de justifier ses peintures très classiques.
    Puis, j’ai compris.
    Dans ce petit milieu, il faut vraiment s'être fait un nom pour accepter ce qui n'aurait reçu, au mieux, qu'un silencieux mépris en réponse à tout "peintre du dimanche" traitant exactement le même sujet.
    En fait, voici encore les rires carnassiers de la caste, un bras d'honneur à tous ces peintres et amateurs d'art, qu'elle considère comme les naufragés de l'arrière-garde avec leurs jolies peintures naturalistes.
    Cette soi-disant avant-garde en est toujours avec la dialectique édictée depuis un siècle par le maître Duchamp, la moquerie pleine de morgue des puissants et le marché en plus !
    Amusant, ce discours profond de la découverte de la peinture. Mais ça masque mal cette nouvelle façon de rire du "petit peuple" et de ses sujets simples.

    • @lotharlamurtra7924
      @lotharlamurtra7924 2 года назад

      L’art, la beauté ne vous intéressent pas du tout. Votre truc c’est la Théorie Critique, Adorno peut-être, le neomarxisme et le wokisme aussi. Sachez que l’histoire de l’art commence avec Duchamp et Fountain by R. Mutt.

    • @ChristopheHoullier
      @ChristopheHoullier 2 года назад +2

      @@lotharlamurtra7924 Ah d'accord ! avant il n'y avait rien.... et c'est moi le woke ? La cancel culture ne finit pas de m'étonner...

    • @lotharlamurtra7924
      @lotharlamurtra7924 2 года назад

      @@ChristopheHoullier avant c’était les beaux arts. Le regard de Duchamp comporte une renaissance de la perception esthétique. En fait nous sommes d’accord sur ce sujet n’est-ce pas ?

    • @ChristopheHoullier
      @ChristopheHoullier 2 года назад +2

      ​@@lotharlamurtra7924 Oui je suis d'accord sur le changement de perception esthétique apporté par Duchamp.
      Mais avant lui, la notion de beau avait déjà évolué. Les arts modernes ont amené Duchamp. Mais plus que la notion esthétique, il a torpillé également toutes les conventions autour de la notion d'œuvre.
      Une révolution qui n'a pas encore été dépassée pour une frange d'artistes se réclamant du maître. Cette frange qui, depuis, a longtemps méprisé la peinture et que Hirst ici singe avec morgue.

    • @fusains-Hitsuzendō-peintures
      @fusains-Hitsuzendō-peintures Год назад +1

      Perso, je me suis naïvement fait avoir avec le discourt bien polisseé de l'artiste, du reportage :-((

  • @Chron_Dawg78
    @Chron_Dawg78 5 месяцев назад +1

    great work, great wisdom

  • @louizeantiplastique4581
    @louizeantiplastique4581 3 года назад +4

    The interviewer is sooo great also 👌🏼👌🏼

  • @hofmannwaves1525
    @hofmannwaves1525 2 года назад +2

    Magnifique!

  • @adriancaldwell
    @adriancaldwell 3 года назад +5

    If you have to explain it...we live in the era of venerating confidence, style over substance

  • @TheXtdesign
    @TheXtdesign 3 года назад +6

    Great artist, great art, brilliant clairvoyance! 🌸🌸

    • @JC-vg5gl
      @JC-vg5gl Год назад +1

      some consider over rated

  • @ItsjustRowan
    @ItsjustRowan 2 года назад +2

    This series would be more impressive to me if Hirst had the confidence to work on a much smaller scale. Massive paintings are a bit of a cop out and are often made for the luxury art market rather than for people to view in a public gallery.

  • @islandiasmith9329
    @islandiasmith9329 2 года назад +3

    Magnifique de poésie. Merci beaucoup.

  • @kunfang
    @kunfang 3 года назад +2

    never thought that master of conceptual like to paint ,but this view feels very xxl,the tree are so big ,is because Maybe make them biger looks great.
    xxl art.

  • @JohnFlouridis
    @JohnFlouridis 2 месяца назад

    Great Artist 💯

  • @verenajohannsmann6882
    @verenajohannsmann6882 Год назад

    Love!

  • @xtiaanday5738
    @xtiaanday5738 3 года назад +15

    Jesus, he hasnt made any good art in decades...

  • @tamarrozenblat
    @tamarrozenblat 3 года назад +1

    Love it thanks!

  • @ikarimegumi
    @ikarimegumi 2 года назад

    ピンクだけじゃだめだってことが途中でわかって軌道修正するのがすごい。ピンクだけを見てる気がする。

  • @miguelsuarez8010
    @miguelsuarez8010 2 года назад +1

    What is the paint he uses? Sinthetic? Latex? I suppose he tossess away his garments after each painting session.

  • @StudioYulianto
    @StudioYulianto 3 года назад

    Idenya luar biasa. Sangat impresif. Saya suka banget.

  • @suminion_o
    @suminion_o 2 года назад +2

    What kind of paint does Damien Hirst use to create the cherry blossom pieces? Does he mix acrylic paint with some other media? Xx

  • @robertradocha6871
    @robertradocha6871 3 года назад

    💞💯🎨🎨🎨 wonderful !!!!

  • @g1sanj
    @g1sanj 8 месяцев назад

    🤩

  • @giorgiaionica3581
    @giorgiaionica3581 2 года назад

    beautiful

  • @michelsauveur
    @michelsauveur 2 года назад +3

    C'est fou ce qu'il faut de commentaires creux et insipides pour expliquer que la "merde" que l'on voit n'est pas de la "merde"

    • @pkrlartsrealestatessl.952
      @pkrlartsrealestatessl.952 2 года назад

      exactement ...mdr Meme avec de belles paroles et la founadation Cartier .... ca reste toujours de la M..... !

  • @nanli8136
    @nanli8136 3 года назад +8

    When you compare this paintings to Zao Wou-ki , Francis Bacon, Picasso, it looks weak, a poor technique, no strength.

  • @yfrontsguy
    @yfrontsguy 3 года назад

    Wow!!

  • @scottthompson405
    @scottthompson405 2 месяца назад

    Only members of an ‘art cult’ would consider this great art. Hirst is the priest and you’re his disciples.

  • @jensellingsen
    @jensellingsen 3 года назад +14

    Never realized he was such a bad painter

  • @cirovallone889
    @cirovallone889 2 года назад

    Oil or acrylic?

  • @akasataw
    @akasataw 2 года назад

    芸術は爆発していますね

  • @isabellamusulo9190
    @isabellamusulo9190 3 года назад +15

    This is "art" which everybody can do (even small children). Why is something like this promoted?

    • @louizeantiplastique4581
      @louizeantiplastique4581 3 года назад +3

      Study history of art and you will understand

    • @jeveuxvoirsilenthill
      @jeveuxvoirsilenthill 3 года назад +2

      @@louizeantiplastique4581 hahahahahahah......hahahahahhahahahahahaha........No need to read history of art to like Klimt, Vangogh and Monet. And no need to stydy bullshit history to teach me what I have to to appreciate.

    • @louizeantiplastique4581
      @louizeantiplastique4581 2 года назад +8

      @@jeveuxvoirsilenthill oh yes I totally understand your point of view. but there's so much more to art than just liking or appreciating.. creativity is about doing whatever you want anyway.. history of art makes you understand why and how we have come to this type of painting, that's all. they are not telling you what to like or not, obviously you can choose that at any moment. yes, art is about choosing and then seeing

    • @mayainfi
      @mayainfi 2 года назад

      @@louizeantiplastique4581 any books or RUclips films you could recommend? I currently share the view that this is too childish and 20000 euros is just for his name but I really would like to understand the appeal

    • @reymontcantil199
      @reymontcantil199 2 года назад

      @@mayainfi art is something all humans should do. most children are brilliant at it. when you are working on this scale and within the idea of concepts like "energy" and "feeling" and "nature" you cant try and make these things "like nature" you can only make them as you would "in nature".

  • @davidhepher619
    @davidhepher619 3 года назад +1

    What ever you do,don't mention David Hockney ...Basil Faulty,where are you!!?

  • @MDRAyo
    @MDRAyo 3 года назад +2

    Je vient de découvrir une autre science que la physique qui étudie le vide : ça s'appelle la peinture

  • @henrydemonfreid1985
    @henrydemonfreid1985 Год назад

    Tim Marlow. Worst nightmare. He’s been working in the art world for years and you still feel like it’s none of his f***ing business. In the bin.

  • @paulmactavish3355
    @paulmactavish3355 3 года назад

    Would love to HAVE ACCESS TO ALL THAT PAINT, LOVELY JEALOUS TIP MY HAT *

  • @H0tDawgWater911
    @H0tDawgWater911 9 месяцев назад +1

    I mean…. Theyre alright…

  • @manhattanmurphy8978
    @manhattanmurphy8978 2 года назад

    great talk. Does anyone know who the music is by?

  • @willalwaystelehandler8450
    @willalwaystelehandler8450 2 года назад

    It's a great tree🧁

  • @kasalive
    @kasalive 3 года назад +1

    Aprendió algo de hockney

  • @johnmorgan5495
    @johnmorgan5495 3 года назад +2

    He's a multi millionaire, so he can do whatever he wants

    • @majdavojnikovic
      @majdavojnikovic 2 года назад +1

      Sire, but we don't have to look at it.

  • @yata9107
    @yata9107 3 года назад +11

    very boring painting

  • @kathylesant5217
    @kathylesant5217 3 года назад

    Magnifique exposition

  • @lpizzvm8171
    @lpizzvm8171 2 года назад +1

    c'est une blague?

  • @danielledeneuter8794
    @danielledeneuter8794 3 года назад

    Sublime

  • @artistrenibifamovon
    @artistrenibifamovon 2 года назад

    Regards

  • @tylero8595
    @tylero8595 3 года назад +2

    Kusama, is that you??????? No, its just Hirst

  • @movid
    @movid 2 года назад

    Spin paintings?
    That is what you would see in the streets as art for tourists in the 80'$, how kitsch can you Get, hello there

  • @topdeot
    @topdeot 3 года назад +1

    David Hockneyish

  • @majdavojnikovic
    @majdavojnikovic 2 года назад +2

    What is this? Blind David Hockney?

  • @leststoner
    @leststoner 8 месяцев назад +1

    Pure drivel.

  • @paganini6500
    @paganini6500 3 года назад +3

    This guy is so facile.

  • @alphajava761
    @alphajava761 3 года назад +10

    He's such a horrible painter. He's everything that wrong with art over the last 30 years along with Koons.

  • @mekaa8489
    @mekaa8489 2 года назад +10

    Aucune consistance, aucun but vraiment honnête et donc aucun intérêt. Essayer de se racheter une crédibilité de peintre en virant un tiers de ses assistants pour se prendre pour Yayoi Kusama qui rencontre David Hockney, quand on connait le parcours de cet artiste c'est au minimum pathétique pour ne pas dire révoltant. Jean Dubuffet aurait eu encore beaucoup à dire sur le sujet… asphyxiante culture.

    • @agneshubert9993
      @agneshubert9993 8 месяцев назад

      Dubuffet n'est pas une référence pour moi ,son œuvre ne me touche pas .

  • @davidsaluk9726
    @davidsaluk9726 7 месяцев назад

    I don’t understand why he has to paint same picture many times maybe he wants to make money.

  • @ericchevaleyre7265
    @ericchevaleyre7265 4 месяца назад

    So easy as an artistic work. What a shame...

  • @EricWatbe
    @EricWatbe 8 месяцев назад

    Ironic that he is obviously making art that is 100% "craft".

  • @KREN12623
    @KREN12623 Год назад

    ☮️🌀☮️🕊️💜🕊️🖤💙💛🤍🕊️☮️🌀☮️🕊️💜♥️🧡💚☮️🌀☮️🙏🙏🙏🙏👉💛🌹💛💫👈👂❗❗♻️❗❗👉🖤💙💛🤍🕊️💜🕊️💜♥️🧡💚👈❗❗❗❗🛴🦼🦆🛢️❗❗❗❗♥️👶♥️🧑‍🦳♥️❗❗❗❗💫♻️🐉♻️👉🚜🌹🖤❗❗❗❗♻️☮️🌀☮️🖤💙💛🤍❗☮️🌀☮️❗💜♥️🧡💚☮️🌀☮️♻️❗❗❗❗🙏🙏🙏🙏💜👑💜🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @港女養生
    @港女養生 Год назад

    Ikea art

  • @johannarose8466
    @johannarose8466 2 года назад +2

    He is a con artist.

  • @o-roron
    @o-roron 2 года назад +2

    日本人にとってはひどく平凡な題材をいまどき印象派を意識したペインティングで、新鮮味に欠けた作品に見えてしまう。

  • @superalbertofilho
    @superalbertofilho 3 года назад

    Van Gogh + Monet

  • @gevorgsinanyan9206
    @gevorgsinanyan9206 Год назад

    this is not art, this is dilettantism and devaluing the concept of art, through these, someone launders money and calls it art...

  • @movid
    @movid 2 года назад

    This is so mediocre oh yes, of course, some people absolutely Love this kitschy stuff.
    This discussion is like the colors, they give me nausea

  • @tiwantiwaabibiman2603
    @tiwantiwaabibiman2603 3 года назад +4

    What the h#llll is he talking about?!!! I've been an artist and a curator than he's been old enough to spell painting and a curator for decades. I find almost everything he's saying such BS. Just paint dude, just paint! LOL! WP talking about art like this is proof of that elitist european perspective and critic.

  • @ac-dg5oj
    @ac-dg5oj 3 года назад +2

    La fortuna di qs artista è di aver sempre e solo saputo copiare con grande intelligenza...................... niente di nuovo van gogh che ritorna e ritorna e ritorna

  • @movid
    @movid 2 года назад

    C'est merdique, et certains essayent de nous faire croire que c'est beau.
    Non seulement c'est mal exécuté, mais les couleurs donnent la nausée,
    Par contre, ça impressionne les idiots

  • @pkrlartsrealestatessl.952
    @pkrlartsrealestatessl.952 2 года назад

    Sorry for Mister Hirst but this is bullshit ... and not because the Cartier foundation is behind .... this painting are good ! art is not question of money art is question of talent .... what i see here is just an artist without inspiration .... so sad for him ! when you have nothing more to say as an artist better to stay quiet

  • @tallpoppysyndrome9578
    @tallpoppysyndrome9578 13 дней назад +1

    This artist is terrible, sorry it is the truth

  • @k-asp3r754
    @k-asp3r754 3 года назад +2

    if you need to add a speech on your works,you re failing on your communicator task.

    • @giorgiaionica3581
      @giorgiaionica3581 2 года назад

      i don't agree. There are many brilliant pieces of art that you wouldn't be able to understand without their titles and so on. When speech or phrases are being added, they become part of the work and certainly give a new perspective to the audience. This, at least, is my opinion.

    • @k-asp3r754
      @k-asp3r754 2 года назад

      @@giorgiaionica3581 its not that you wouldn t be able to understand.its because theres nothing to see and nothing to understand ..all the adds its called marketing.all the artist know that.

    • @BlowinFree
      @BlowinFree 2 года назад

      @@giorgiaionica3581 name a few then. Go on.

  • @silviahan1277
    @silviahan1277 2 года назад

    ㅌㅌㅌㅌ ㅌㅌ

  • @boulenger6
    @boulenger6 3 года назад +4

    jolie travail d'amateur, c'est agréable à regarder, mais soyons honnête ce n'est pas à la hauteur de sa notoriété, il a fait mieux. N'est pas David Hockney qui veut...

    • @humanitiesprofessor1912
      @humanitiesprofessor1912 3 года назад +1

      Bien dit. Je suis d'accord. 👌

    • @Methilde
      @Methilde 3 года назад

      Quelque part entre le magnifique cerisier en fleur de Vanghog et Les grande toiles de Hockney, donc nul
      part.

    • @marianneguarino6299
      @marianneguarino6299 3 года назад +3

      Avez-vous vu l'exposition et ressenti ce que ces peintures dégagent ? En connaissant l'histoire de la peinture, on peut se permettre une opinion, sinon ce ne sont que des critiques simplistes. J'ai vu l'expo, c'était un moment magique.

    • @boulenger6
      @boulenger6 3 года назад +1

      @@marianneguarino6299 Merci pour votre proposition : que cela soit magique; je n'en doute pas . Il doit y avoir sur terre des centaines de millier de peintres de talent dont les toiles agrandi sur trois à quatre mètre de hauteur provoqueront un instant magique, c'est juste cette notoriété qui me parait surfaite, ceci dit c'est loin d'être mauvais mais si on connait un tant soit peu l'histoire de l'art on ne peut pas sérieusement qualifier ce travail d’exceptionnel .

    • @jeveuxvoirsilenthill
      @jeveuxvoirsilenthill 3 года назад +1

      @@boulenger6 Je me demande quand les gens seront un peu plus honnêtes et avoueront que l'art n'est pas affaire de beaux discours.

  • @JC-vg5gl
    @JC-vg5gl Год назад

    pierre bonnard is* rad

  • @arturartur1051
    @arturartur1051 3 года назад +1

    Don't believe it, it still wants to shock. Or he goes back to the origins, the innovator becomes the conservative, from the fear of death of old age, covid.

  • @MegaYankee12
    @MegaYankee12 2 года назад +1

    Ça un artiste ? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂

  • @olivierbolton8683
    @olivierbolton8683 Год назад

    too self conscious..sadly another wannabe propped up by the vacant establishment

  • @cecileverchere9182
    @cecileverchere9182 2 года назад

    C'est laid

  • @UDPNUNU
    @UDPNUNU 2 года назад

    ratio

  • @italy-amanda
    @italy-amanda 7 месяцев назад

    Meh.

  • @MrGreateasternlife
    @MrGreateasternlife 2 года назад

    No talent gangster painter 😅

  • @robertwalker951
    @robertwalker951 7 месяцев назад

    Truly awful work

  • @juliette8941
    @juliette8941 3 года назад

    Vraiment éclaté