When he did an interview in 2010 about the music video for Best I Ever Had, Drake said something that rings true today: “When I read the comments, I was like, man, I guess no one wants to laugh anymore,” he said. In many ways, his music avoids repetition. It was just a way of pinning down the joy of color.”įor Drake, the opposite could be true. “To create that structure, to do those colors, and do nothing,” the artist writes on his website. Hirst has created over 1000 spot paintings, from 1986 to 2011. The cover artwork for Views was released via Drake's Twitter account on April 24, 2016, which features Drake sitting atop the CN Tower in Toronto.
On April 29, 2016, it was revealed that the title had been shortened to Views. Repetition is a common theme in Hirst’s artworks, as the repetition of dots helped elevate the British artist into the first brand in the art world during pre-internet times. According to Drake on Twitter, 'the 6' is a reference to his hometown of Toronto, Ontario. Its reasonable that Kanye West has been on Drakes radar from the earliest starting point.
#Drake views from the 6 album art download#
CLARY/AFP via Getty Images) AFP via Getty Images Drake - Views From The 6 Download Album Drake - Views From The 6 Download Album Most prominent from the collection may have been the pop-rap hit Began From The Bottom. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. Conceived as a single exhibition in multiple locations, “The Complete Spot Paintings 1986– 2011” makes use of this demographic fact to determine the content of each exhibition according to locality. Most of the paintings are being lent by private individuals and public institutions, more than 150 different lenders from twenty countries.
The exhibition will take place at once across all of Gagosian Gallery’s eleven locations in New York, London,Paris, Los Angeles, Rome, Athens, Geneva, and Hong Kong, opening worldwide on January 12, 2012. Gallery in New York Januas they present “The Complete Spot Paintings 1986–2011” by Hirst. Artist Damien Hirst stands in front of one of his paintings during a media preview at the Gagosian.