LONDON — A stainless steel cabinet containing 6,136 handcrafted and painted pills set a record last month for the highest price paid at auction for a work by a living artist.

Damien Hirst's "Lullaby Spring" sold for $19.1 million, Sotheby's, the auction house, said in a statement. The sale propelled Hirst past previous best seller Jasper Johns, whose "Figure 4" netted about $17 million two months ago in New York.

A leading member of the so-called Young British Artists, a group that dominated the British art scene in the 1990s, Hirst is best known for his work involving slicing up and pickling animals and fish in formaldehyde.

His works have consistently attracted controversy — and huge sums of cash.

One, a 14-foot tiger shark immersed in an aquarium filled with formaldehyde, was among a collection of British works that attracted the ire of then-New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani when it was displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 1999. Giuliani tried, unsuccessfully, to cut funding for the museum over its inclusion of a painting of the Virgin Mary on a canvas spattered with elephant dung.

But the publicity didn't hurt Hirst, whose shark was later snapped up by an American collector for $8 million.

Earlier this month, the artist unveiled a platinum cast of a human skull encrusted with over 8,000 diamonds at the opening of his latest exhibition at London's two White Cube galleries. The glittering skull was valued at about $24 million.

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