Spin me right round by  Damien Hirst

Spin me right round 2002

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Dimensions: support: 910 x 710 mm

Copyright: © Damien Hirst and Science Ltd. | CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED, Photo: Tate

Editor: Looking at Damien Hirst’s "Spin me right round," this small drawing on paper feels so isolated on this large white ground. What’s your take on this work? Curator: Hirst's spin paintings invite us to question ideas around authorship and the commodification of art. Do you think the seemingly random nature of the spin challenges traditional notions of artistic skill? Editor: I see what you mean. It's almost like he's critiquing the art market itself. Curator: Precisely. He challenges viewers to consider how the artist's brand impacts value and interpretation. It makes one reflect on the spectacle and consumerism inherent to art. Editor: That gives me a lot to think about. Thanks! Curator: Glad to share. Art should always provoke dialogue and critical engagement!

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tate's Profile Picture
tate 3 days ago

http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/hirst-spin-me-right-round-p13047

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tate's Profile Picture
tate 3 days ago

This is one of the twenty-three etchings that comprise the first volume of two portfolios, In a Spin, the Action of the World on Things I and II. Each etching was made by the artist in London 2002, printed on 350gsm Hahnmuhle paper, proofed and editioned at Hope (Sufferance) Press, London and published by Charles Booth-Clibborn under his imprint, The Paragon Press. There are sixty-eight sets of prints, numbered 1–68 on the colophon page, and six proof copies. Tate’s copy is the second in the edition. Each set is accompanied by a colophon page and presented in a box with an original spin painting in household paint on the cover and the title and artist’s name printed on top. In addition to etchings similar to those in the first volume, the second volume of In a Spin... includes a photograph of the night sky that Hirst took using a long exposure, recording the movement of the stars in the sky caused by the earth’s rotation, and contributing to the notion expressed in the words: the Action of the World on Things. The artist first coined this phrase in 1999, when he was explaining the origin of his spot paintings (see AR00498), differentiating two strands of his work: ‘an involvement with death and decay, and ideas and life: the action of the world on things exists somewhere, and the colour exists somewhere else. And it’s fantastic.’ (Quoted in Damien Hirst and Gordon Burn, On the Way to Work, London 2001, p.119.) In the event, the imagery of In a Spin, the Action of the World on Things I and II unites these two strands.