‘With Dead Head’ is a photograph, dating from 1981, sealed onto aluminium. The image shows a teenage Hirst pictured in the Leeds anatomy school he regularly visited to make life drawings.

Hirst has described the formative experience of seeing dead bodies as a teenager: ‘When I was really young, I wanted to know about death [...] and I felt sick and I thought I was going to die and it was awful. And I went back and I went back and I drew them. And the point where death starts and life stops, for me, in my mind, before I saw them, was there. And then when I’d seen them and I’d dealt with them for a while, it was over there again. It’s like I was holding them. And they were just dead bodies. Death was moved a bit further away.”[1]

‘With Dead Head’ is an expression of the difficulties inherent in attempting to understand our own mortality, and in dealing with the “unacceptable idea” of death.[2] Hirst explains: “To me, the smile and everything seemed to sum up this problem between life and death. It was such a ridiculous way of being at the point of trying to come to terms with it, especially being sixteen [...] This is life and this is death.”[3]