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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 117

Jeff Koons

Schätzpreis
800.000 £ - 1.200.000 £
ca. 1.571.159 $ - 2.356.738 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.252.500 £
ca. 2.459.846 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 117

Jeff Koons

Schätzpreis
800.000 £ - 1.200.000 £
ca. 1.571.159 $ - 2.356.738 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.252.500 £
ca. 2.459.846 $
Beschreibung:

Jeff Koons Violet-Ice (Kama Sutra) 1991 Coloured murano glass. 33 x 69 x 42 cm. (13 x 27 1/4 x 16 1/2 in). This work is from an edition of three plus one Artist’s Proof.
Provenance Sonnabend Gallery, New York; Galerie Lehmann, Lausanne; Private collection, New York Exhibited New York, Illeana Sonnabend Gallery, Cologne, Galerie Max Hetzler; Lausanne, Galerie Lehmann, Made in Heaven, 23 November, 1991 – 6 May, 1992 Literature A. Muthesius, Jeff Koons Cologne, 1992, pp. 138 & 152 (illustrated); R. Rosenblum, The Jeff Koons Handbook, London, 1992, p. 133 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “My work has always been about my own personal sexuality.” (Jeff Koons In the 1980s Jeff Koons burst onto the contemporary art scene, becoming well known in a short span of time for his impressive sculptural works. Often embracing icons of popular culture and modeled after kitschy objects d’art more usually associated with touristy schlock shops, these works established the artist as an innovator casting a fresh eye upon the idea of the readymade and the role he, as an artist, had to play in the history of art. With the series of sculptures and photographs ‘Made in Heaven’ (1989-1992), Koons used his personal romantic and sexual relationship with model and then-wife Ilona Staller, known by her porn star name ‘La Cicciolina,’ as the focal point of an erotic collection of work. Shocking and confrontational at first glance, the highly-detailed artworks reveal themselves to be about much more than graphic sex and embody Koons’s philosophy of revealing everything about himself in order to create artwork that challenges society’s perception of art. Violet-Ice (Kama Sutra) is an embodiment of this aggressively open approach to creativity, an approach which Koons addresses often in interviews: “I try to be a truthful artist and I try to show a level of courage. I enjoy that. I’m a messenger.” (A. Muthesius, Jeff Koons New York, 1992, p. 32) The delicate glass sculpture was fabricated in Murano by world-renownedVenetian glassblowers in order to meet Koons’s impeccably high standards of craftsmanship. The sculpture shows the artist and his wife making love on a floating island of glass, La Cicciolina’s legs thrust vigorously into the air around Koons’s body, capturing the passion and ferocity of their coupling. The sculpture, a frothy confection in dainty violet glass, would be at home on an octogenarian’s bookshelf, a charming collectable trinket, were it not for the lusty subject matter. By combining a recognizable tchotchke, familiar to all in its banality, with a hard-core sexual display, Koons breathes new life into a tired object, reinvigorating it with his energy and humor.The impact of this ‘delightful fusion of the sacred and the profane’ through expert craftsmanship, transforming ‘kitsch into fine art’ is achieved through the work’s ‘surplus of meaning and feeling’, which invests the sculpture with ‘a powerful psychological impact.’ (K. Johnson, ‘The Meaning, Beauty and Humor of Ordinary Things’ in The New York Times, April 23, 2004) Speaking about the role of sex in his artwork, Koons has said: “My art has always used sex as a direct communication line to the viewer… I had to go to the depths of my own sexuality, my own morality, to be able to remove fear, guilt and shame from myself. All of this has been removed for the viewer.” (R. Rosenblum, The Jeff Koons Handbook, London, 1992, pp. 78 & 130). What one gets with Violet Ice is an intimate look into the personal-made-public process that has defined Koons’s career. Evocative of the central themes throughout his body of work, in particular interaction with and commentary upon the surrounding pop culture, Violet Ice, and the Made in Heaven series place Koons squarely within an historical context of eroticized art. As art critic Robert Rosenblum pointed out, Koons’s 1991 sculpture was precisely timed in its pushing of society’s boundaries and acceptance of highly sexualised artworks: [c1] Jeff Koons Jeff and Ilona (Made in Heaven), 1989 ‘Made in Heaven’ also became a revelation in terms of testing the limits of late 20th-century censorship. Until something is show

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 117
Auktion:
Datum:
28.02.2008
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
28 Feb 2008, 7pm London
Beschreibung:

Jeff Koons Violet-Ice (Kama Sutra) 1991 Coloured murano glass. 33 x 69 x 42 cm. (13 x 27 1/4 x 16 1/2 in). This work is from an edition of three plus one Artist’s Proof.
Provenance Sonnabend Gallery, New York; Galerie Lehmann, Lausanne; Private collection, New York Exhibited New York, Illeana Sonnabend Gallery, Cologne, Galerie Max Hetzler; Lausanne, Galerie Lehmann, Made in Heaven, 23 November, 1991 – 6 May, 1992 Literature A. Muthesius, Jeff Koons Cologne, 1992, pp. 138 & 152 (illustrated); R. Rosenblum, The Jeff Koons Handbook, London, 1992, p. 133 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “My work has always been about my own personal sexuality.” (Jeff Koons In the 1980s Jeff Koons burst onto the contemporary art scene, becoming well known in a short span of time for his impressive sculptural works. Often embracing icons of popular culture and modeled after kitschy objects d’art more usually associated with touristy schlock shops, these works established the artist as an innovator casting a fresh eye upon the idea of the readymade and the role he, as an artist, had to play in the history of art. With the series of sculptures and photographs ‘Made in Heaven’ (1989-1992), Koons used his personal romantic and sexual relationship with model and then-wife Ilona Staller, known by her porn star name ‘La Cicciolina,’ as the focal point of an erotic collection of work. Shocking and confrontational at first glance, the highly-detailed artworks reveal themselves to be about much more than graphic sex and embody Koons’s philosophy of revealing everything about himself in order to create artwork that challenges society’s perception of art. Violet-Ice (Kama Sutra) is an embodiment of this aggressively open approach to creativity, an approach which Koons addresses often in interviews: “I try to be a truthful artist and I try to show a level of courage. I enjoy that. I’m a messenger.” (A. Muthesius, Jeff Koons New York, 1992, p. 32) The delicate glass sculpture was fabricated in Murano by world-renownedVenetian glassblowers in order to meet Koons’s impeccably high standards of craftsmanship. The sculpture shows the artist and his wife making love on a floating island of glass, La Cicciolina’s legs thrust vigorously into the air around Koons’s body, capturing the passion and ferocity of their coupling. The sculpture, a frothy confection in dainty violet glass, would be at home on an octogenarian’s bookshelf, a charming collectable trinket, were it not for the lusty subject matter. By combining a recognizable tchotchke, familiar to all in its banality, with a hard-core sexual display, Koons breathes new life into a tired object, reinvigorating it with his energy and humor.The impact of this ‘delightful fusion of the sacred and the profane’ through expert craftsmanship, transforming ‘kitsch into fine art’ is achieved through the work’s ‘surplus of meaning and feeling’, which invests the sculpture with ‘a powerful psychological impact.’ (K. Johnson, ‘The Meaning, Beauty and Humor of Ordinary Things’ in The New York Times, April 23, 2004) Speaking about the role of sex in his artwork, Koons has said: “My art has always used sex as a direct communication line to the viewer… I had to go to the depths of my own sexuality, my own morality, to be able to remove fear, guilt and shame from myself. All of this has been removed for the viewer.” (R. Rosenblum, The Jeff Koons Handbook, London, 1992, pp. 78 & 130). What one gets with Violet Ice is an intimate look into the personal-made-public process that has defined Koons’s career. Evocative of the central themes throughout his body of work, in particular interaction with and commentary upon the surrounding pop culture, Violet Ice, and the Made in Heaven series place Koons squarely within an historical context of eroticized art. As art critic Robert Rosenblum pointed out, Koons’s 1991 sculpture was precisely timed in its pushing of society’s boundaries and acceptance of highly sexualised artworks: [c1] Jeff Koons Jeff and Ilona (Made in Heaven), 1989 ‘Made in Heaven’ also became a revelation in terms of testing the limits of late 20th-century censorship. Until something is show

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 117
Auktion:
Datum:
28.02.2008
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
28 Feb 2008, 7pm London
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