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12 December 2024
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Damien Hirst
Suiko (The Empresses, H10-04)
, 2022
100 x 100 cm. (39.4 x 39.4 in.)
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Damien Hirst
British, born 1965
Suiko (The Empresses, H10-04)
,
2022
Damien Hirst
Suiko (The Empresses, H10-04)
, 2022
100 x 100 cm. (39.4 x 39.4 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Laminated giclée print on aluminium composite, screen printed with diamond dust
Size
100 x 100 cm. (39.4 x 39.4 in.)
Markings
Signed and numbered
Price
Price on Request
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Weng Contemporary
Zug
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About this Artwork
Edition
Edition of 3310
Provenance
HENI
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Description
“Suiko” belongs to “The Empresses”, a series of five glorious prints carefully composed of butterfly wings that create a kaleidoscope effect and are placed on a flaming red background. Each work has been carefully screen printed with glitter coat which offers that gleaming effect on them. Each Empress from this series is named after five exceptionally influential female rulers: Wu Zetian (624-705), Nūr Jahān (1577-1645), Theodora (c. 490-548), Suiko (554-628) and Taytu Betul (1851-1918). Their characters and stories are enhanced by the dominant red tone of the series, which deals with themes such as life, war, power, anger, love, joy and luck. Suiko, a composition which evokes life in many ways, is titled after the first recorded empress of Japan. Though legend says that several females had ruled before Suiko (554-628 CE), her rise to power after her brother Sushun was murdered in 592 CE marked a break with tradition of installing male rulers. Suiko is remembered for the Chinese and Korean influences she brought to the country, including the implementation of the Chinese calendar, the arrival of Chinese and Korean craftsmen, and, perhaps most notably, the establishment of Buddhism.
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