Jeff Koons: A Retrospective

June 27–Oct 19, 2014


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Made in Heaven

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If with Banality Koons proposed to liberate his audience from the stigma of bad taste, with Made in Heaven he promised nothing less than emancipation from the shame of sex. The billboard from 1989 announced a feature film that Koons planned to realize with the world-famous porn star Ilona Staller (also known as La Cicciolina), whom he hired to pose with him on her sets. Although Koons ultimately decided not to make the film, he fell in love with his costar and produced a body of increasingly explicit work in which the pair played a contemporary Adam and Eve surrounded by symbols of fidelity and affection, such as dogs and flowers. Koons’s work and public relationship caused a media sensation, which climaxed with the couple’s marriage and the opening of Made in Heaven in New York. To this day, the work stands not as pornography but an extremely risky and vulnerable form of self-portraiture as well as an enduring experiment in fame.

Bourgeois Bust—Jeff and Ilona, 1991

A marble sculpture of a man and woman embracing, with the woman adorned in beaded attire and the man shirtless, both gazing into each other's eyes.
A marble sculpture of a man and woman embracing, with the woman adorned in beaded attire and the man shirtless, both gazing into each other's eyes.

Jeff Koons, Bourgeois Bust—Jeff and Ilona, 1991. Marble; 44 1⁄2 x 28 x 21 in. (113 x 71.1 x 53.3 cm). Stefan T. Edlis Collection. © Jeff Koons

In this sculpture Koons presents himself and Ilona Staller as an idealized emblem of beauty and romance, straight out of the annals of art history or of Hollywood’s storied lovers. To make the piece, the pair posed in rapturous embrace while being photographed from all angles. These images were then sent to the famous marble workshops in Pietrasanta, Italy, where many of Michelangelo’s sculptures were produced. The artisans compared the photographs and followed highly specific instructions from Koons to fabricate this bust and a related self-portrait on view across the gallery. As with much of Koons’s sculpture from this period, the bust’s form and finish might be compared to Baroque and late eighteenth century Neoclassical precedents as well as to the Vegas-style knockoffs they inspired.



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On the Hour

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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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