View all Damien Hirst artworks
Swatch X Damien Hirst: Mirror Spot Mickey is a writswatch celebrating the 90th birthday of Mickey Mouse designed by Damien Hirst.
Need Help?
Artwork Details
Commemorative Mickey Mouse Swatch watch
Size: Unsigned Outer sleeve shows signs of wear on all corners. Internal hard plastic case is in mint condition.
Watch is in mint condition, unworn and still has protective screen on face.
Additional Information:
This Swatch and Damien Hirst collaboration celebrates the iconic character's 90th birthday. The watches were made in a limited edition of 19,999 pieces respectively. The Mirror Spot Mickey was made available online and in-store beginning November 16th, 2018.
Shipping & Returns
This artwork ships from an archive seller in The UK
Our archive is sourced from our community of vetted galleries and collectors to offer buyers ultra-rare artworks no longer available on the open market.
Orders can be returned within 14 days of receipt by emailing hello@artrepublic.com. For exclusions and details read our full returns policy.
Please note that your order may be subject to import duties and fees upon delivery, depending on your shipping destination.
Price match
30 day returns
Courier shipping
Damien Hirst is a British artist based between London, Gloucestershire and Devon. Since gaining recognition as one of the Young British Artists (YBAs) in the late 1980s, Damien Hirst's art has consisted of installations, sculptures, paintings and drawings dealing with death, science, beauty and life.
Damien Hirst is a British artist based between London, Gloucestershire and Devon. Since gaining recognition as one of the Young British Artists (YBAs) in the late 1980s, Damien Hirst's art has consisted of installations, sculptures, paintings and drawings dealing with death, science, beauty and life.
Hirst is one of the most celebrated, rich and notorious British artists of the 21st century, with major retrospectives including ‘The Agony and the Ecstasy,’ at the Museo Archeologico Nazionale in Naples, the show ‘For the Love of God’ at the Tate Modern, as well as over 80 solo exhibitions and 260 group shows to his name. Hirst studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths College and has pursued a risk-taking approach to making art that has resulted in numerous headlines and record-breaking prices. In 1995 Hirst received the Turner Prize with an exhibition featuring 'Mother and Child (Divided)' (1993), a set of four tanks containing the bisected and preserved halves of a cow and calf. Hirst is unafraid to explore the uncertainties of the human experience and the inevitability of death. His early photographic work 'With Dead Head' (1991) shows the young artist posing next to a corpse, smiling. This intentionally disturbing image set a precedent for the rest of Hirst’s career and encapsulates his intentions to shock and tackle taboos. Hirst's vulnerability and curiosity with the human condition inevitably shines through in his artwork, from his iconic multicoloured spots to animals preserved in tanks of formaldehyde.