JEFF KOONS – FONDATION BEYELER, BASEL, SWITZERLAND
ON NOW THROUGH SEPTEMBER 2ND, 2012
opening in coincidence with art week basel with support from hugo boss and mercedes benz, the fondation beyeler presents an extensive exhibition of the american artist jeff koons, documenting his artistic development over the past thirty years of practice through the lenses of three milestone series. ‘the new’ showcases koons’s earliest work, as he began in the early 1980’s with a series of readymade-like appliances and sculptures. ‘banality’, a period begun in 1988, includes traditionally crafted sculptures in porcelain and wood, that nonetheless take as their subject ironic confrontations between pop culture icons and baroque artworks.
balloon dog (red), 1994-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 307,3 x 363,2 x 114,3 cm
image © designboom
balloon dog (close-up), 1994-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 307,3 x 363,2 x 114,3 cm
image © designboom
‘CELEBRATION’ brought together for the first time
perhaps koons’s most ambitious series to date is ‘celebration’, a collection of hyperrealistic large-scale stainless steel sculptures and large-format paintings, initiated in 1994 and brought together at the beyeler exhibition for the first time.
all works in ‘celebration’ reference memories of childhood, family, and holiday: balloon animals, hanging ornaments, play-doh, an easter egg, and birthday cake. at the same time, they are represented in imposing, room-size forms,
composed of high-alloy chrome steel, drawing attention to the contrast between their appearance of weightlessness and their heavy, stable reality.
balloon dog, 1995-98 oil on canvas 259,1 x 363,2 cm
image © designboom
the paintings in the series are based on arrangements of real objects created by the artist– with objects placed in front of draped, reflective foil– which were photographed, reworked via schematization, and then enlarged.
an interesting interaction among media forms is created at beyeler, where several of the sculptures are installed next to a painting of the same subject. the filling of entire rooms, or entire vistas, with the large-scale installations, creates a false sense of scale where viewers again return to the smallness of childhood.
tulips, 1995-2004 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 203,2 x 457,2 x 520,7 cm
image © designboom
tulips, 1995-2004 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 203,2 x 457,2 x 520,7 cm
image © designboom
tulips, 1995-98 oil on canvas 282,7 x 331,9 cm
image © designboom
play doh, 1995-2007 oil on canvas 333,4 x 282,5 cm
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moon (light pink), 1995-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 330,2 x 330,2 x 101,6 cm
image © designboom
moon (detail), 1995-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 330,2 x 330,2 x 101,6 cm
image © designboom
cake, 1995-2007 oil on canvas 318.5 x 295.6 cm
image © designboom
balloon swan (magenta), 2004-2011 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 350,5 x 302,3 x 238,8 cm
image © designboom
balloon swan (magenta), 2004-2011 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 350,5 x 302,3 x 238,8 cm
image © designboom
in addition to the room-size installations, ‘celebration’ comprises smaller sculptural works of children’s icons. at first look, ‘titi’ and ‘elephant’ appear to be metallic foil balloons, belying the fact that these too are composed of heavy-weight stainless steel.
titi, 2004-09 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 96,2 x 60,5 x 37,8 cm
image © designboom
elephant, 2003 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 92,7 x 73,7 x 48,3 cm
image © designboom
cracked egg (blue), 1994-2006 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating two pieces: 198,1 x 157,5 x 157,5 cm and 45,7 x 121,9 x 121,9 cm
image © designboom
ribbon, 1995-97/2010 oil on canvas 259,1 x 363,2 cm
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hanging heart (gold/magenta), 1994-2006 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 291 x 280 x 101,5 cm
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balloon flower (blue), 1995-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 340 x 285 x 260 cm
image © designboom
balloon flower (blue), 1995-2000 high chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating 340 x 285 x 260 cm
image © designboom
particularly representative of this conceptual basis is ‘split-rocker‘, a floral sculpture first presented by koons in avignon, france, in 2000 and now reinstated at the fondation beyeler. the sculpture departs from two designs of children’s rockers– a rocking horse, and a dinosaur. koons cut the heads of these objects in half and reassembled them, although their edges do not meet.
‘with the combination of pony and dinosaur,‘ exhibition curator theodora vischer offers, ‘‘split-rocker’ embodies that confrontation of opposites that is also expressed in the notion of a ‘monstrous’ , gigantic children’s toy. yet the artist chooses transitory flowers, of all things, as the material for a monument that promises duration. it is not least in this special interplay of supposed opposites that the true tension and force of koons’s art lie.‘
in the beyeler, the porcelain model of the sculpture koons designed for bernardaud is also on exhibition, offering the same mutability of medium highlighted in the ‘celebration’ series.
jeff koons with ‘split-rocker’ at the berower park, fondation beyeler
photo © matthias willi
split-rocker vase for bernardaud, 2012 porcelain 36 x 40 x 33 cm
image © designboom