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Utopia - Signed Print by Damien Hirst 2012 - MyArtBroker

Utopia
Signed Print

Damien Hirst

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69 x 83cm, Edition of 55, Digital Print

Medium: Digital Print

Edition size: 55

Year: 2012

Size: H 69cm x W 83cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

Last Auction: October 2022

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Auction Results

Auction Date
Auction House
Location
Return to Seller
Hammer Price
Buyer Paid
October 2022
Sotheby's New York
United States
£3,393
£3,992
£5,030
January 2020
Phillips London
United Kingdom
June 2015
Van Ham Fine Art Auctions
Germany
November 2014
Artcurial
France
October 2014
Sotheby's New York
United States
June 2014
Ketterer Kunst Hamburg
Germany
February 2013
Phillips London
United Kingdom
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Track auction value trend

Damien Hirst's Utopia, a signed digital print from 2012, is estimated to be worth between £3,950 and £6,000. This artwork has an auction history of seven total sales since its entry to the market on 26th February 2013. The hammer price over the past five years has varied, with an average annual growth rate of 1%. The edition size of this piece is limited to 55.

Created with Highcharts 11.4.8Feb 2013Sep 2014May 2016Dec 2017Jul 2019Mar 2021Oct 2022£2,500£3,000£3,500£4,000£4,500£5,000£5,500© MyArtBroker

Meaning & Analysis

Pharmaceutical iconography has been a prominent theme throughout Hirst’s artistic oeuvre. Notably, the artist’s first solo show at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1991 featured numerous glass fronted cabinets displaying empty medicine boxes. Later, one of Hirst’s sculpture from 2000, The Void, appeared as the artist’s first pill cabinet work. Indeed, Utopia is an image that directly references this earlier work, showing the painted pills as little sculptures and the mirrored back of the cabinet to create a visually complexing work.

The display of pills as high art represents the absurdity in controlling feelings in body and mind through modern medicine. Hirst has explained why he is interested in the medical pill motif saying that, “Pills are a brilliant little form, better than any minimalist art. They’re all designed to make you buy them…they come out of flowers, plants, things from the ground, and they make you feel good, you know, to just have a pill, to feel beauty.”