Artists

Work

Summer, 1975
  • Summer, 1975 Summer, 1975
    Cryla on canvas
    213 x 183 cm / 82¾ x 72 in
    AFG 2
  • Casa Mia, 1963 Casa Mia, 1963
    Mixed media on board
    125 x 95 cm / 49¼ x 37½ in
    AFG 58
  • Amador, 1962 Amador, 1962
    Cryla and mixed media on board
    129 x 98.5 cm / 50¾ x 38¾ in
    AFG 59
  • Black Armchair c.1967-68 Black Armchair c.1967-68
    Oil on canvas
    112 x 102 cm / 44¼ x 40¼ in
    AFG 111
  • Interior, 1966-67 Interior, 1966-67
    Oil on canvas
    214 x 183 cm / 84¼ x 72¼ in
    AFG 314
  • Untitled, 1975 Untitled, 1975
    Oil on canvas
    127 x 102 cm / 50 x 40¼ in
    AFG 926
  • Troubled Water No.2, 1993-94 Troubled Water No.2, 1993-94
    Cryla and mixed materials on panel
    152.5 x 213.5 cm / 60 x 84 in
    AFG 21555
  • Puerta Grande De Oro, 1998-99 Puerta Grande De Oro, 1998-99
    Mixed media on board
    101 x 101 cm / 39¾ x 39¾ in
    AFG 29088
  • Adobe Pequeno, 2004 Adobe Pequeno, 2004
    Mixed media on board
    62 x 51.5 x 10 cm / 24½ x 20¼ x 4 in
    AFG 37553
  • Double Blue, 2004 Double Blue, 2004
    Cryla and mixed media on board
    100.5 x 100.5 x 11 cm / 39½ x 39½ x 4½ in
    AFG 37556
 

Biography

Derek Hirst CV

A cursory glance at the diverse body of work produced during Derek Hirst’s long and prolific career could lead to the assessment that he was an artist bent on defiant capriciousness. His paintings are uniform only in their insistence on dramatic shifts of emphasis and advocacy of a radically transforming visual language. At different stages in an involved artistic métier, Hirst dedicated attention to an exceptionally varied subject matter, whilst deploying media ranging from oils, dyes and acrylic to less conventional materials such as sand, plaster, rope, and dried reeds. The style of his work, too, permutated from precisely calculated, hard-edged colour to a luminous blending of surfaces and tones.

From this inventory of difference, it is easy to conclude that Hirst invested considerable impetus in a refusal to be ‘pinned down’. But the reality is quite the contrary. Being-in-the-world and producing art that contained "every aspect of human passion and mirror[ed] consciously, or unconsciously, as a seismograph might measure the slightest earthly tremor, the events of the world" was Hirst’s ceaseless endeavour. His essential anchoring to place meant that, beyond perfunctory appearances, Hirst’s preoccupations and passions remained constant, his work bound together by an unvarying purpose. It is this dedication to evoking or (re)presenting place - whether Catalonian earthy incandescence, the balanced formal beauty of the Zen gardens of Kyoto or the coal-stained, snow-smudged domestic landscapes of his native Doncaster - that provides remarkable consistency in an apparently inconsistent oeuvre.

 

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