More than 20 of Damien Hirst’s famed formaldehyde sculptures will be brought together for the first time at the new Natural History exhibition from the Gagosian Gallery. Over the last 30 years, Hirst has created various pieces that see whole animals, or their parts – dissected, bisected or even flayed – suspended and preserved in formaldehyde. Natural History collates the most affecting and iconic sculptures in the series, from The Impossible Lovers, a cabinet of glass jars containing cow’s organs, to The Beheading of John the Baptist, which features a cow’s head on a table surrounded by knives and its decapitated body on a clinical tiled floor.