On Sunday, April 9, the public gets a chance to see what Damien Hirst has been dreaming up for the past decade. Widely viewed as the erstwhile British bad boy’s attempt at a comeback, “Treasures From the Wreck of the Unbelievable” fills two venues in Venice, the Palazzo Grassi and the Punta della Dogana. The suite of giant, high-production sculptures is presented as a cargo of lost world treasures that was sunk thousands of years ago, only to be salvaged in 2008 (coincidentally, the time of Hirst’s last career peak) .

The elaborate backstory is slightly undercut by the fact that the fake relics include not just historical references, but the faces of Pharrell, Kate Moss, Rihanna, and Die Antwoord singer YoLandi Visser, not to mention Mickey Mouse.

Each of the works in the show is made in an edition of three, one made to look like it is a treasure just dredged from the deep (a “Coral,” in Hirst’s parlance); another made to look like the salvaged relic restored for display by modern-day curators (a “Treasure”); and a third which is presented as a reproduction of the pseudo-historical object (a “Copy”).

To really drive the fantasy home, the show features underwater footage of the works being salvaged from the ocean floor off Zanzibar.

This fantasy museum is also a showroom, we gather. Carol Vogel reports that White Cube and Gagosian, Hirst’s galleries, have already been shopping the works, at prices starting at $500,000 apiece and rising to upward of $5 million.

In addition to interest from investors, the show has already generated protest by anti-Hirst activists in Venice, and is sure to have critics carping.

As we wait for the reviews to roll in, here are the first available images from “Treasures From the Wreck of the Unbelievable”:

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