I first saw Damien Hirst’s cabinets ten years ago, in London, at Barmacy on a Friday night. They were the perfect, kitschy and ridiculous background to the happy energy in the lounge.
Seeing them again, this time at L&M Gallery on East 78th Street, they seemed awfully sinister. The cabinets are constructed with unnerving precision, and the generically-labeled medicines and supplies inside are arrayed with a devastating, lifeless elegance. There are half-gallon-size jars of codeine and sudafed, and boxes and boxes of prescription painkillers. These are the things that keep us healthy.
(Damien Hirst, The Existence of Nothing Causes Nothing, 1999.)