Koons Jeff

Inflatable Ballon Flower (Yellow) 129.5 × 149.9 × 177.8 cm, PVC, 1997
About work

“Like a capricious genie, Jeff Koons gives people far more than they secretly ask for. In the toylike reflective surfaces of these works, one sees a morally distorted self, a primal, naked persona shamefully satisfying an unbridled appetite for sensation, the child one never grew up to be.” ~ Vik Muniz

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Date of Birth: 1955
Place of residence: New York

For many years Koons’ artworks have been in the top ranks of the most expensive sculptures. In the 1990s, the artist’s booster period in his career, Koons began creating large-scale art objects out of polished stainless steel. Although they look like balloon toys (inflatable dogs, flowers, monkeys), they weigh several tons. The main advantage of his “balloon” sculptures is the sense of their lightness, almost weightlessness, although they are way heavier than they appear. Today, this particular series by Koons is among the most expensive works of contemporary art. In 2019, the art world was talking about his artwork Rabbit, which has been sold for $91 million at Christie’s auction. Due to this, Koons regained the title of the most expensive living artist.

Koons holds a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and has been exhibited in New York, London, Chicago, Basel, Seoul and many more. His artworks are in the collections of the Broad Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the MoMA, the Tate and the Whitney Museum of American Art.

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Works IN COLLECTION

Works IN COLLECTION