Damien Hirst and Michael Joo's Natural World Interview

In a relationship spanning close to two decades, Damien Hirst and compatriot Michael Joo come

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In a relationship spanning close to two decades, Damien Hirst and compatriot Michael Joo come together in their very first artistic endeavor titled “Have You Ever Really Looked at the Sun?”. The exhibition’s main theme embodies the “shared fascination with, and investigation and representation of, all things natural”. Below, WWD caught up with the pair as they offer some insight into their relationship and the show itself. The exhibition runs until August 14th at the Haunch of Vension gallery in Berlin.

Damien Hirst and Michael Joo “Have You Ever Really Looked at the Sun?” Exhibition
Haunch of Venison
Heidestrasse 46
10557 Berlin
Germany

WWD: So, what do you see when you look at the sun?

Damien Hirst: Actually, the title came from a joke about two snowmen.

One says to the other, “Can you smell carrots?” His nose was a carrot…and then Michael said, “Have you ever really looked at the sun?” You can’t look at it.

Michael Joo: I’ve never stopped wanting to look [at the sun] since I was a child. I just want to see what’s there. But you never can look at it. You’d be blind.

D.H.: It would be hard being blind as a visual artist…

M.J.: But maybe it would be better.

WWD: Why did you decide to work together now?

M.J.: There’s a lot we both lean toward, but this wasn’t a labored, curatorial decision. It’s more about shared themes.

D.H.: We’re both interested in science. Nature. Minimalism. Love. Jesus. Though the jury’s still out on God…for me.

M.J.: There are things about gesture and process in there, like the cutting of animals in half. It’s a very human gesture.

D.H.: Cutting something in half is something that almost needs to be done. To look inside things gives you answers, especially if you do it scientifically. I don’t tear things open.

WWD: Michael, when you cut antlers and extend them with metal rods, is it a similar gesture?

M.J.: Antlers are an ultimate natural design. They’re almost decorative but functional. A symbol of who’s the boss in the forest. They pretend to be symmetrical, but nothing in nature is perfectly symmetrical. In that sense, they’re a kind of natural ready-made. For me, I try to work with the antler and its growth patterns — and to see if I can balance and improve it. That’s why they’re called “Improved Rack.” Like Damien, I like to look more deeply into things and see what it’s all about. I want to look at the core, but as with the title of the show, you can never really look at the core. You can feel the heat, look at the light, but you can’t look at the sun.

WWD: Diamonds, real or faux, also seem to be a shared bond. Michael, are you continuing the Herkimer Diamond series?

M.J.: Actually, it’s just beginning. But I’ve worked with hand-grown crystals before, plus salt, which is a kind of crystal, and MSG. So the crystals are there and now taking a new form.

WWD: Damien, are your diamond days over?

D.H.: They’re either over. Or beginning. It seems to be something about value that I’m still interested in. It made sense in the period I did it in, but now it seems those times are past. But I’m still looking at it. There are so many people that say I can’t be doing that in this market, which makes me want to do it more.

WWD: How is the art market looking these days?

D.H.: Things are looking better. A lot of projects I was doing — like the big museum shows where you need a lot of money, which, in the end, you don’t get back — that’s slowed down. But the market feels better.

M.J.: And people are excited to hear about exciting projects and want to see them. So that’s got to be healthy.

WWD: What are you both working on next?

D.H.: I’m taking May off…

M.J.: I’m making crystals out of real estate.

D.H.: Lord, even I don’t know what that’s supposed to mean…

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