Damien Hirst, The Empresses H10-04 Suiko, 2022

Damien Hirst
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Damien Hirst

The Empresses H10-04 Suiko, 2022

Laminated Giclée print on aluminium composite, screen printed with glitter.
 
Edition Size: Physical Print: 1,657 NFT:1,653 (total 3310)
 
The present work is number 1397 out of 3310
 
39 2/5 × 39 2/5 × 3/10 inches
 
Held in original packaging; unframed
 
Signed and numbered on the label on the back 
 
Acquired directly from the publisher, HENI Inc. - not a middleman
 

“I just made these 5 mega red glitter prints! I thought the idea was good but seeing them now, real, they feel like they are unlocking the unfathomable mysteries of the universe. (...) They feel powerful and important. I called them “The Empresses” and named them after five famous female rulers.”
—Damien Hirst

The total edition is: 3310 and is broken down as follows:
Physical Print: 1,657
NFT: 1,653
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.
In Suiko, variously sized paired wings emanate from the work’s centre, producing a symmetrical concentric circle, a compositional arrangement that recalls Buddhist symbolism and the life cycle. This circular pattern is strikingly defined by glittering lines of red that diagonally cross the composition from the centre to meet each corner. With the wings set against a red background, the lines shoot through the pairs of disembodied wings where the bodies once existed.
As is true of each work from the series, Suiko appears in a constant state of transformation, the butterflies moving and evolving the longer one stands before the work. While the intricacies can be truly appreciated up close to the print, from afar the composition takes on a new life. From this vantage point, Suiko reveals itself to have a ballooning arrangement of wings, which are organised around the central pattern of concentric circles and complemented by external arrangements of further wings. This arrangement is akin to a biological or molecular structure, evocative of the organisms that it depicts.

About the Empresses Series:
The striking Empresses prints are constructed of beautiful images of red butterfly wings, which are intricately arranged with a filigree of red glitter to produce visually intoxicating kaleidoscope-like effects. The prints are named after five exceptionally influential female rulers: Wu Zetian, Nūr Jahān, Theodora, Suiko and Taytu Betul. 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.