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  1. trifletruffles. •. "Mother and Child Divided is a floor-based sculpture comprising four glass-walled tanks, containing the two halves of a cow and calf, each bisected and preserved in formaldehyde solution. The tanks are installed in pairs, the two halves of the calf in front of the two halves of the mother, with sufficient space between each ...

  2. Damien Hirst’s Mother and Child (Divided) arguably confronts us with a stark subversion of traditional artistic representations of the Holy Mother, Mary, and Child, Jesus.. The work might be described as a bisected mother cow and her calf, separated for eternity, preserved at a painful distance from one another, suspended in formaldehyde.

  3. 10 de mar. de 2015 · Finalmente Hirst ganó el Premio Turner en 1995 por la obra “Mother and Child, divided”, una vaca y su ternero doblemente divididos: se hallan separados en mitades y a la vez en vitrinas diferentes, con lo que Hirst quería transmitir al público el rompimiento del vínculo sagrado de una madre y su hijo.

  4. Mother and Child (Divided) Date. 1993 & 2007. Medium. glass, stainless steel, perspex, acrylic paint, cow, calf & formaldehyde solution. Accession number. T12751. Work type. Sculpture. Tags. This artwork does not have any tags yet. You can help by tagging artworks on Tagger. Artist or maker Damien Hirst.

  5. Live at Park West Chicago 2005

  6. 11 de jun. de 2023 · The first reason why Damien Hirst’s Mother and Child (Divided) has gained immense fame lies in the conceptual brilliance of the artwork. Hirst’s piece consists of a cow and a calf, both split into longitudinal halves and preserved in formaldehyde-filled tanks. The artwork challenges the traditional notions of life and death, as well as ...

  7. Mother and child, divided. 1. When Damien Hirst won the Turner Prize in 1995 with bisected cow and calf in tanks of formaldehyde, I understood very little about what it is to separate the unity between mother and child. Then, it was a sensationalist installation, and part of an exciting movement that subverted art.