Hirst's religious reflections

Think tank: a pickled and mutilated cow's head represents one of the Apostles in a piece entitled Matthew, Mark, Luke And John
The Weekender

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Damien today unveiled a typically shocking show in which he mutilates dead cows in even more grotesque ways than before. It is the first exhibition by Hirst - the perennial bad boy of Brit-art - in this country for eight years. In it, he slices and dices a small herd of animals to create a bizarre new series of religious works.

The first work visitors will see as they enter the White Cube Gallery is called The Prodigal Son - a calf cut in half, each section pickled in one of the artist's trademark tanks.

This piece, made some years ago, is tasteful compared with others. Take the Apostles, a series of 13 works in which the 12 disciples and Jesus are each represented by bizarre cabinets filled with objects ranging from scientific apparatus to a monkey's sawn-in-half skull. Other saintly relics include a mass of bloodied plastic tubes that look like intestines, rosaries, crosses, an earshaped-ashtray and clumps of hair. Hirst's final flourish is the pickled cows' heads, each skinned and cut up to varying degrees, which stand in front of each disciple's cabinet.

The mutilation becomes more extreme for a piece called Matthew, Mark, Luke And John. Again, Hirst uses pickled cows' heads but as well as being skinned the skulls have been stabbed and embedded with shards of glass, knives and skewers.

A work entitled Adam And Eve (Breaking Open The Head) takes a similar approach. According to Jay Jopling, owner of the White Cube, the piece "is about the fruit of temptation, breaking open the imagination. It's like opening up the mind".

The Cancer Chronicles are a series of canvases in which Hirst's victims are flies. Each painting is embedded with tens of thousands of the dead insects and named after a disease such as cancer, leprosy and syphilis.

The paintings are meant to mirror a book of poems, also called The Cancer Chronicles, which Hirst penned. There are also new butterfly and spot paintings, Hirst's favourites. The cow corpses seem likely to spark the most sensation, but the most surprising work is one in which Hirst rejects his usual shock tactics.

Instead he uses paint to create a picture of a white dove that would make a tasteful Christmas card.

The most spectacular work is outside the gallery in Hoxton Square. Charity, as the sculpture is called, is a 22-foot version of the little girl once used by the Spastics Society as a collection box. In Hirst's version the girl has been jemmied open. A few coppers are scattered on the ground along with the crowbar used to commit the crime.

Romance In The Age Of Uncertainty opens on Wednesday and runs until 19 October.

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