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Qatar unveils Damien Hirst’s ‘Miraculous Journey’

British artist Damien Hirst’s “The Miraculous Journey” (2005-2013), consisting of 14 large-scale bronze sculptures that chart the gestation of a fetus from conception to birth, is unveiled outside the new Sidra Medical and Research Centre in Doha, Qatar. (Nadine Al Koudsi QMA and Damien Hirst/Science Ltd.)
British artist Damien Hirst’s “The Miraculous Journey” (2005-2013), consisting of 14 large-scale bronze sculptures that chart the gestation of a fetus from conception to birth, is unveiled outside the new Sidra Medical and Research Centre in Doha, Qatar. (Nadine Al Koudsi QMA and Damien Hirst/Science Ltd.)
DOHA (AFP) ― Qatar unveiled 14 massive bronze sculptures by British artist Damien Hirst charting the gestation of a human being from conception to birth.

The “Miraculous Journey” statues were uncovered for a day last week outside the Sidra Medical and Research Centre, still under construction on the outskirts of Doha.

They were put back under wraps until Jan. 14 to “protect them while work is ongoing” in the area, the Qatar Museums Authority explained.

The project is an initiative by Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani, the emir’s sister who heads the museums authority and wants to give a boost to art in the gas-rich Gulf state.

The installation consists of 14 figures which took three years to create, ranging between 4.8 meters and 10.7 meters in height and weighing between nine and 28 tons each.

They begin with the fertilization of an egg and end with a fully-formed baby. It portrays the gestation of a foetus.

The unveiling coincided with the Doha opening on Thursday of a first solo exhibition in the Middle East by controversial artist Hirst. Entitled “Relics,” it runs until Jan. 22.

The exhibition showcases Hirst’s diamond-encrusted skull, “For the Love of God,” as well as a shark preserved in formaldehyde.

Qatar this month displayed a statue immortalizing French footballing legend Zinedine Zidane’s headbutt on Italy’s Marco Materazzi in the 2006 World Cup final on the Doha corniche.

The display comes as Qatar prepares to host the 2022 World Cup.
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