Pharmacy wallpaper
Wallpaper
1997 (designed), 2004 (printed)
1997 (designed), 2004 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Pharmacy restaurant and bar was opened by Damien Hirst and Matthew Freud in 1997, with the support of restaurateurs Liam Carson and Jonathan Kennedy. It represented the extraordinary confluence of the worlds of art, design, PR, celebrity and the London social scene at the height of the YBA (Young British Artists) phenomenon. Hirst was responsible for the interior, which included displays of pharmaceutical packaging in the windows, a molecular structure representing Hirst's DNA on the bar, and artworks including 'The Fragile Truth' pill cabinet and a series of butterfly pieces. The floor was inlaid with images of pills, the waiters wore surgical gowns, and the furniture, ceramics and glassware were all based on medical themes.
The wallpaper shows brightly coloured pills and pharmaceutical products on a background of metallic gold or silver. The pills are arranged as a wall-chart, but the apparently descriptive labels are, in fact, references to passages of the Bible. A precursor of the now ubiquitous fashion for using wallpaper to give a domestic ambience to bars, clubs and gastro-pubs, Hirst's Pharmacy wallpaper was inspired by his drug cabinets and pill paintings. He produced a pictorial pharmacopeia for the walls, the preciousness of the jewel-like capsules and shiny blister-packs enhanced by the gold and silver grounds. The design acknowledges the addictive - and repetitive - aspect of drug-taking, whether those drugs are medicinal, nutritional or recreational. In the context of the restaurant, the wallpaper also (like Hirst's 'Last Supper' prints) implied that most food, the product of industrialised processes, is stuffed with chemical compounds - from artificial colours and flavours to antibiotics and growth hormones. The pills and the medicines are captioned with Biblical incidents, from miracles to damnations; Christ's assertion 'I am the bread of life' is countered in the implacable repeat by the reiteration of plagues and afflictions, and ultimately, Death. Despite our faith in modern medicaments, Hirst implies that the rituals of pill-popping, like the rituals of worship, cannot save us.
Pharmacy closed in 2003 but the wallpaper was produced again in 2004 in an edition of 1000 rolls per colourway, and sold through Hirst's company Other Criteria.
The wallpaper shows brightly coloured pills and pharmaceutical products on a background of metallic gold or silver. The pills are arranged as a wall-chart, but the apparently descriptive labels are, in fact, references to passages of the Bible. A precursor of the now ubiquitous fashion for using wallpaper to give a domestic ambience to bars, clubs and gastro-pubs, Hirst's Pharmacy wallpaper was inspired by his drug cabinets and pill paintings. He produced a pictorial pharmacopeia for the walls, the preciousness of the jewel-like capsules and shiny blister-packs enhanced by the gold and silver grounds. The design acknowledges the addictive - and repetitive - aspect of drug-taking, whether those drugs are medicinal, nutritional or recreational. In the context of the restaurant, the wallpaper also (like Hirst's 'Last Supper' prints) implied that most food, the product of industrialised processes, is stuffed with chemical compounds - from artificial colours and flavours to antibiotics and growth hormones. The pills and the medicines are captioned with Biblical incidents, from miracles to damnations; Christ's assertion 'I am the bread of life' is countered in the implacable repeat by the reiteration of plagues and afflictions, and ultimately, Death. Despite our faith in modern medicaments, Hirst implies that the rituals of pill-popping, like the rituals of worship, cannot save us.
Pharmacy closed in 2003 but the wallpaper was produced again in 2004 in an edition of 1000 rolls per colourway, and sold through Hirst's company Other Criteria.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Pharmacy wallpaper (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Five-colour screenprint |
Brief description | Roll of wallpaper 'Pharmacy wallpaper', silver screenprinted paper, designed by Damien Hirst, United Kingdom, designed in 1997 and printed 2004 |
Physical description | Unused roll of wallpaper printed with images of pills and medicines with quotations from the Bible, on a silver ground. |
Dimensions |
|
Copy number | From an edition of 1000 rolls |
Credit line | Given by Victim |
Object history | The wallpaper was designed originally for the London restaurant Pharmacy, co-owned by Damien Hirst. The restaurant opened in 1997 and closed in 2003. |
Summary | Pharmacy restaurant and bar was opened by Damien Hirst and Matthew Freud in 1997, with the support of restaurateurs Liam Carson and Jonathan Kennedy. It represented the extraordinary confluence of the worlds of art, design, PR, celebrity and the London social scene at the height of the YBA (Young British Artists) phenomenon. Hirst was responsible for the interior, which included displays of pharmaceutical packaging in the windows, a molecular structure representing Hirst's DNA on the bar, and artworks including 'The Fragile Truth' pill cabinet and a series of butterfly pieces. The floor was inlaid with images of pills, the waiters wore surgical gowns, and the furniture, ceramics and glassware were all based on medical themes. The wallpaper shows brightly coloured pills and pharmaceutical products on a background of metallic gold or silver. The pills are arranged as a wall-chart, but the apparently descriptive labels are, in fact, references to passages of the Bible. A precursor of the now ubiquitous fashion for using wallpaper to give a domestic ambience to bars, clubs and gastro-pubs, Hirst's Pharmacy wallpaper was inspired by his drug cabinets and pill paintings. He produced a pictorial pharmacopeia for the walls, the preciousness of the jewel-like capsules and shiny blister-packs enhanced by the gold and silver grounds. The design acknowledges the addictive - and repetitive - aspect of drug-taking, whether those drugs are medicinal, nutritional or recreational. In the context of the restaurant, the wallpaper also (like Hirst's 'Last Supper' prints) implied that most food, the product of industrialised processes, is stuffed with chemical compounds - from artificial colours and flavours to antibiotics and growth hormones. The pills and the medicines are captioned with Biblical incidents, from miracles to damnations; Christ's assertion 'I am the bread of life' is countered in the implacable repeat by the reiteration of plagues and afflictions, and ultimately, Death. Despite our faith in modern medicaments, Hirst implies that the rituals of pill-popping, like the rituals of worship, cannot save us. Pharmacy closed in 2003 but the wallpaper was produced again in 2004 in an edition of 1000 rolls per colourway, and sold through Hirst's company Other Criteria. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.1157-2012 |
About this object record
Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.
Suggest feedback
Record created | October 12, 2012 |
Record URL |
Download as: JSON