Damien Hirst Unicorn work to go on display at Tate St Ives
Tate announced today that Damien Hirst’s large vitrine work, The Child’s Dream 2008, will go on show at Tate St Ives this autumn. The work, which comprises a ‘unicorn’ in a gold-plated vitrine of formaldehyde, will be one of the highlights of the exhibition The Dark Monarch: Magic and Modernity in British Art opening on 10 October 2009
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Displayed in the Heron Mall, the dramatic first gallery at Tate St Ives, The Child’s Dream 2008 will create a magical beginning to the group exhibition, The Dark Monarch, which takes its title from the infamous 1962 book by St Ives artist Sven Berlin. The exhibition will explore the influence of folklore, mysticism, mythology and the occult on the development of art in Britain. Focusing on works from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present day it will consider, in particular, the relationship they have to the landscape and legends of Britain and Cornwall. It will examine the development of early Modernism, Surrealism and Neo-Romanticism in the UK, as well as the reappearance of esoteric and arcane references in a significant strand of contemporary art practice.
Martin Clark, Artistic Director at Tate St Ives, said: “I am incredibly pleased that The Child’s Dream by Damien Hirst will be shown at Tate St Ives this autumn. The unicorn is a powerful symbol of good in early pagan mythology and is still associated with fairytales and the mystical landscapes of King Arthur in Britain and Cornwall. Hirst’s exploration of this beautiful, but unreachable beast will be a great opening to our major exhibition The Dark Monarch.”
Damien Hirst said: “It’s great to be showing The Child’s Dream at Tate St Ives. The work really lends itself to the themes of The Dark Monarch. Children’s dreams are more fantastical than adult’s dreams and as the sculptor Constantin Brancusi said, when we are no longer children we are already dead.”
The Dark Monarch will also include works by important modernists and surrealists including Graham Sutherland, Paul Nash, Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore and Ithell Colquhoun; Neo-Romantics such as Cecil Collins, John Piper, Leslie Hurry and John Craxton; as well as emerging and established contemporary artists including Cerith Wyn Evans, Mark Titchner, Eva Rothschild, Simon Periton, Clare Woods, Steven Claydon, John Stezeker and Derek Jarman
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