£2,050-£3,100
$4,000-$6,000 Value Indicator
$3,650-$5,500 Value Indicator
¥19,000-¥28,000 Value Indicator
€2,450-€3,700 Value Indicator
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Medium: Lithograph
Edition size: 200
Year: 1992
Size: H 22cm x W 22cm
Signed: Yes
Format: Signed Print
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Auction Date | Auction House | Artwork | Hammer Price | Return to Seller | Buyer Paid |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 2022 | Phillips New York - United States | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
May 2021 | Bonhams New York - United States | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
November 2018 | Freeman's - United States | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
July 2018 | Sotheby's New York - United States | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
May 2015 | Artcurial - France | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
June 2012 | Cornette de Saint Cyr Paris - France | Pharmacy - Signed Print | |||
July 2009 | Bonhams Knightsbridge - United Kingdom | Pharmacy - Signed Print |
Pharmacy is a print by Damien Hirst from 1992, signed and published in an edition of 200. The print shows a photograph of Hirst’s site-specific work of the same name, first shown in 1992 at the Cohen Gallery in New York. The original work was a true to life sized installation of a pharmacy, using materials like shelved cabinets and objects representing pharmaceutical drugs.
Hirst has said of his pharmaceutical works, “I’ve always seen medicine cabinets as bodies, but also like a cityscape or civilisation, with some sort of hierarchy within it. It’s also like a contemporary museum of the Middle Ages. In a hundred years time this will look like an old apothecary. A museum of something that’s around today.”
Much of Hirst’s oeuvre, including Pharmacy, is reminiscent of the work of Marcel Duchamp and his ‘ready-mades’. Taking images and objects from the everyday and hardly making any alterations, Hirst confronts the viewer with questions around what makes something art? Is an object considered an art object because it sits in a museum? Both the original installation of Pharmacy and the printed editions epitomise this notion of the ready-made, bringing true-to-life medicine cabinets and the setting of a pharmacy into the museum space.