Giclée print with glaze
360 x 490 mm (14 x 20 inches)
Edition of 50
Signed and numbered
Published by Other Criteria
The first 'Kaleidoscope' painting, 'It's a Wonderful World', was created in 2001. Originally inspired by a Victorian tea tray found by Hirst. The 'Kaleidoscope' paintings reference the spiritual symbolism of the butterfly, used by the Greeks to depict Psyche, the soul, and in Christian imagery to signify the resurrection.
Hirst began using butterflies in his work as early as 1989. Describing the insect as a 'universal trigger', he has explained: "Everyone's frightened of glass, everyone's frightened of sharks, everyone loves butterflies."
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