Some artists prefer not to talk about the value of their work. Damien Hirst clearly revels in it, going so far as to call art “the greatest currency in the world.” On the eve of his first major retrospective in his native Britain, Hirst hit back at a leading critic who dismissed him as a conman and advised anyone owning his work to sell it fast. Julian Spalding, a curator and critic who has just written a short book called “Con Art – Why you ought to sell your Damien Hirsts while you can,” went on the attack last week with articles in at least two national newspapers. They were designed to coincide both with the release of his book and the opening this week of an exhibition at Tate Modern, sponsored by the Qatar Museums Authority, tracing Hirst’s journey from a student at Goldsmiths College to the world’s most commercially successful living artist. Spalding questioned whether Hirst – known for his shark suspended in formaldehyde, a diamond-encrusted skull, spot paintings and medicine cabinets – was an artist at all and described his works, which fetch millions at auction, as “worthless financially.” Speaking at the Tate Modern, Hirst was clearly used to such jibes and brushed Spalding’s criticism aside with a grin. “It’s like, you say ‘sell your Hirst.’ I say ‘don’t sell your Hirsts, hang on to them.’ It’s always healthy to have both views – people love it, people hate it. I once said as long as they spell my name right I don’t mind. As I’ve got older I don’t really mind if they spell my name right either. “Andy Warhol said that great thing didn’t he? ‘Don’t read your reviews, weigh them.’” The fact that Hirst quoted Warhol was hardly surprising – both artists have been commercially canny and saw the value of their works as inextricably linked to the art itself. Hirst’s spot paintings, for example, are made by employees and untouched by the artist, a fact that did not prevent them becoming status symbols for the rich and famous. The artist has come to embody the spirit of 1990s London where his works, often given intriguing titles, appealed to hedge fund managers and oligarchs as well as an art world clamoring for new ideas. Championed early on by collector Charles Saatchi, Bristol-born Hirst personifies conspicuous consumption, yet the 46-year-old, with a fortune estimated at over 200 million pounds, insisted that the art came first. “I’m one of those lucky artists that makes money in their lifetime, and makes lots of money,” he said. “I’m not afraid of that but I think the goal’s always been to make art and not money. Making money is a by-product, a very happy by-product. “I think art’s the greatest currency in the world. Gold, diamonds, art – I think they are equal ... I think it’s a great thing to invest in.” The show itself focuses on some of Hirst’s most important early works with a view to putting his later series into context. The first spot painting, for example, was made in 1986 and, instead of the precise grid of equally spaced and equally sized circles of different hues comes a slap-dash affair with paint dripping down a canvas of rows of irregular shapes. Two years later, Hirst conceived and curated the “Freeze” exhibition of his work and that of fellow students, an early and important step toward establishing him as the leading figure in the influential “Young British Artists” movement. By 1995 he was a famous artist, winning the coveted Turner Prize and, in his acceptance speech, reminding the world of his humble academic background and rebellious spirit. “It’s amazing,” he said, “what you can do with an E in A-Level art, a twisted imagination and a chainsaw.” The chainsaw referred to “Mother and Child, Divided,” a bisected cow and calf which went on display at the Turner show and provoked widespread criticism. Another Hirst work featuring a rotting cow and bull was banned in New York because of fears it would “prompt vomiting among visitors.” It was leading U.S. dealer Larry Gagosian who showcased Hirst in the United States, presenting the “No Sense of Absolute Corruption” show in New York in 1996. Hirst’s famous “The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living” – a “pickled” shark – stands in the middle of the Tate show, a reminder of how death has been a dominant theme throughout Hirst’s 25-year career. New to many will be “In and Out of Love,” a room in which butterflies hatch, live and die as the public passes through. It shares some of the themes with “A Thousand Years” (1990) in which maggots hatch inside a glass vitrine, develop into flies, feed on the severed head of a cow and meet their end on an “insect-o-cutor.” A whiff of decaying flesh escapes from the glass container, to go with the odor of stale cigarette butts in his giant ashtray “Crematorium” and the inescapable smell of money. That is strongest toward the end of the show in a gold-wallpapered room dedicated to Hirst’s record-breaking auction at Sotheby’s in 2008 where he raised $177 million from over 200 new works. Called “Beautiful Inside My Head Forever,” it was a groundbreaking event, conceived as a single work of art that bypassed the dealers – and their hefty fees – altogether. His diamond-encrusted skull “For the Love of God” is also here, displayed in a blacked-out box in the cavernous Turbine Hall lit only by spotlights shining on the 8,601 flawless gems set in a platinum cast of a human skull. The sculpture fetched the then equivalent of $100 million in 2007, when it sold to a consortium of investors that included Hirst himself. The artist has long avoided a retrospective, deeming it “more OAP” (old age pensioner) than YBA and worrying that his life’s work would “amount to nothing” once it went on display. He finally accepted the idea and the exhibition is one of the highlights of the Cultural Olympiad which is based around this summer’s Olympic Games in London. “Damien Hirst” runs at the Tate Modern until Sept. 9.