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Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons (born January 21, 1955 in York, Pennsylvania) is an
American contemporary artist and sculptor. As a teenager he revered
Salvador Dali, to the extent of visiting him in the Plaza Hotel.
He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Maryland
Institute College of Art, and studied painting, but then worked
as a Wall Street commodities broker, whilst establishing himself
as an artist before recognition in the 1980s. He set up a factory-like
studio in a SoHo loft on the corner of Houston and Broadway in New
York, with over 30 staff, each assigned to a different aspect of
producing his work, in a similar mode to Andy Warhol's Factory (and,
for that matter, Renaissance artists).
Koons' work is classified as Neo-Pop or Post-Pop, as part of an
80's movement in reaction to the pared-down art of Minimalism and
Conceptualism in the previous decade. Although the use of commercial
imagery is a starting point, there is also the incorporation of
some of the Conceptual approach which implies an irony - denied
by Koons: "A viewer might at first see irony in my work...
but I see none at all. Irony causes too much critical contemplation,"
(which in turn might well be perceived as an ironic double bluff).
He caused controversy by the elevation of unashamed kitsch into
the high art arena, exploiting more throwaway subjects than even,
for example, Warhol's soup cans. His work Balloon Dog (1994-2000)
is based on balloons twisted into shape to make a toy dog. Koons'
sculpture differs in two major respects to the original: 1) it is
made of metal (painted bright red to give the appearance of balloons),
2) it is more than ten feet (three metres) tall. Supporters claim
for such transformation "an awesome presence... a massive durable
monument" (Amy Dempsey, ed. Styles, Schools and Movements,
2002, Thames & Hudson), and for other work that they are "wowed
by the technical virtuosity and eye-popping visual blast" (Jerry
Saltz, art critic for the [[Village Voice]]).
Others have been less enthusiastic. Mark Stevens of The New Republic
dismissed him as a "decadent artist [because he] lacks the
imaginative will to do more than trivialize and italicise his themes
and the tradition in which he works... He is another of those who
serve the tacky rich." Michael Kimmelman of The New York Times
saw "one last, pathetic gasp of the sort of self-promoting
hype and sensationalism that characterized the worst [of the 1980s"
and threw in for good measure "artificial," "cheap,"
and "unabashedly cynical".
Koons' early work was in the form of conceptual sculpture, one
of the best-known being Two Ball 50/50 Tank, 1985, consisting of
two basket balls floating in water, which half-fills a glass tank.
The influence on Damien Hirst's later work The Physical Impossibility
of Death in the Mind of Someone Living - a shark suspended in formaldehyde
in a glass tank - is unmistakable, as is Koons' concrete cast of
'negative space' beneath a chair upon the work of British sculptor
Rachel Whiteread (who displayed a room full of coloured resin casts
of 'negative space' beneath a chair).
Koons moved on to "Statuary", the large stainless-steel
blowups of toys, and then a series "Banality", which culminated
in 1988 with Michael Jackson and Bubbles, the world's largest ceramic,
a life-size gold-leaf plated statue of the sitting singer cuddling
Bubbles, his pet chimpanzee. (Three years later it sold at Sotheby's
New York as Lot 7655 for $5,600,000, trebling Koons' previous sale
record.)
1n 1991 he married Hungarian-born naturalized-Italian porn star
La Cicciolina, aka Ilona Staller, who for five years (1987-92) pursued
an alternate career as a member of the Italian parliament. His "Made
in Heaven" series of paintings, photos and sculptures portrayed
the couple in explicit sexual positions and created even more controversy
than he had before. In 1992 they had a son Ludwig; the marriage
ended soon after. They agreed joint custody but Staller absconded
from New York to Rome with the child, where mother and son remain,
despite the award in 1998 of sole custody to Koons by the US courts,
which had dissolved the marriage. In the aftermath he stated: "That
experience really gave me a sense of responsibility to the public.
I was losing my sense of humanity. Now, every day, I feel more and
more responsible in the act of communicating and sharing and really
trying to be as generous as possible as an artist."
During this time, he was commissioned in 1992, to create a piece
for an art exhibition in Bad Arolsen, Germany. The result was Puppy,
a forty-three feet (thirteen meter) tall topiary sculpture of a
West Highland White Terrier puppy executed in a variety of flowers
on a steel substructure. In 1995 the sculpture was dismantled and
re-erected in Sydney Harbor on a new, more permanent, stainless
steel armature with an internal irrigation system. In 1997 the piece
was purchased by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and installed
on the terrace outside the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Before the
dedication at the museum, a trio disguised as gardeners attempted
to plant explosive-filled flowerpots near the sculpture [1], but
were foiled by Bilbao police. Since its installation, Puppy has
become a noted icon for the city of Bilbao. In the summer of 2000
it travelled to New York City for a temporary exhibition at Rockefeller
Center.
In 1999 he commissioned a song about himself, on Momus' album Stars
Forever.
In 2001 he concentrated on painting in a series "Easyfun--Ethereal",
a collage approach incorporating bikinis (with the bodies wearing
them removed), food and landscape - painted under his perfectionist
supervision by assistants.
In 2005 he was elected as a Fellow to the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences.
Whether Koons will be seen in time as a critical commentator in
the tradition of the Dadaists and a genuine leader in the controversial
tradition of the avant-garde, or merely as a fashionable purveyor
of meaninglessness and banality, remains to be seen. However, this
judgement cannot be made in isolation from the evaluation of the
wider contemporary art scene. He has had an undoubted influence
on noted younger artists - his extreme enlargement of mundane objects
has been copied by Damien Hirst (e.g. in Hirst's Hymn, an eighteen-foot
version of a fourteen-inch anatomical toy) and Mona Hatoum amongst
others. Even a cursory study of history shows that contemporary
institutional acceptance (his work has been exhibited in London's
Royal Academy) is no reliable guide to the judgement of posterity.
What can be said is that at the moment Koons attracts extremes of
enthusiasm and vitriol, and that his work is amongst the most expensive
in the world.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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