Jeff Koons: A Retrospective
June 27–Oct 19, 2014
Jeff Koons is widely regarded as one of the most important, influential, popular, and controversial artists of the postwar era. Throughout his career, he has pioneered new approaches to the readymade, tested the boundaries between advanced art and mass culture, challenged the limits of industrial fabrication, and transformed the relationship of artists to the cult of celebrity and the global market. Yet despite these achievements, Koons has never been the subject of a retrospective surveying the full scope of his career. Comprising almost 150 objects dating from 1978 to the present, this exhibition will be the most comprehensive ever devoted to the artist’s groundbreaking oeuvre. By reconstituting all of his most iconic works and significant series in a chronological narrative, the retrospective will allow visitors to understand Koons’s remarkably diverse output as a multifaceted whole.
This exhibition will be the artist’s first major museum presentation in New York, and the first to fill nearly the entirety of the Whitney's Marcel Breuer building with a single artist’s work. It will also be the final exhibition to take place there before the Museum opens its new building in the Meatpacking District in 2015.
Jeff Koons: A Retrospective is organized by Scott Rothkopf, Nancy and Steve Crown Family Curator and Associate Director of Programs.
The exhibition travels to the Centre Pompidou, Musée national d’art moderne, Paris (November 26, 2014–April 27, 2015) and to the Guggenheim Bilbao (June 12–September 27, 2015).
Leadership support for this exhibition is provided by
The exhibition is sponsored by
Significant support is provided by Neil G. Bluhm; Steven A. and Alexandra M. Cohen Foundation, Inc.; Susan and John Hess; Cari and Michael J. Sacks; and the National Committee of the Whitney Museum of American Art.
Major support is provided by Anne Cox Chambers, Nancy C. and A. Steven Crown, Stefan Edlis and Gael Neeson, Lise and Michael Evans, Anne Dias Griffin and Kenneth Griffin, Dakis Joannou, Allison and Warren Kanders, Amy and John Phelan, Brett and Daniel Sundheim, and David Zwirner Gallery.
Generous support is provided by The Broad Art Foundation; Melva Bucksbaum and Raymond Learsy; Wendy Fisher; Mr. and Mrs. J. Tomilson Hill; Antonio Homem, Sonnabend Gallery; Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins; Liz and Eric Lefkofsky; Linda and Harry Macklowe; the Mugrabi Collection; Brooke and Daniel Neidich; Almine Rech Gallery; David Teiger; and Fern and Lenard Tessler.
This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.
Opening Dinner sponsored by
Easyfun
9
Koons created Easyfun in 1999, during one of the most difficult periods of his artistic and personal life. His marriage to Ilona Staller ended acrimoniously, and she abducted their young son to Italy. Meanwhile, Koons embarked on Celebration, a series of large paintings and sculptures that were extremely difficult to execute for technical and financial reasons. With Easyfun, he attempted to free himself from these difficulties and to work in a faster and more direct manner. The colorful mirrors suggest a joyous menagerie of cartoon animal silhouettes, yet their blank faces and exaggerated scale also evoke a darker sense of foreboding. These works shift attention from their maker to their viewers, whom they reflect and distort. Easyfun also comprises Koons’s sculpture Split-Rocker and his first handmade oil painting, Loopy.
Loopy, 1999
Inspired in part by Pablo Picasso’s remark, “When I was a child I could draw like Raphael, but it took me a lifetime to draw like a child,” Loopy and other paintings from the Easyfun series aim to recapture the innocent spirit of childhood. The smiling cartoon rabbit at the top of the canvas is the familiar mascot of Trix cereal. Its red nose is echoed in the cherry crowning a dollop of whipped cream, while its smile is doubled in the crescent of cereal pieces curving across the bottom of the picture. Winding through this imagery are tracks made for Hot Wheels toy cars and white polka dots that Koons has linked to the work of John Baldessari. Koons has commented that he hopes his paintings capture our attention the same way that a simple cereal box can grip a child’s imagination each day at breakfast.
Events
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Member Preview Day:
Jeff Koons: A RetrospectiveWednesday, June 25, 2014
12–5 pm -
VIP Preview and Reception for Jeff Koons: A Retrospective
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
6–7 pm -
Priority Entry to Opening Cocktail Reception for Jeff Koons: A Retrospective
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
7–8 pm -
Opening Cocktail Reception: Jeff Koons: A Retrospective
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
8–11 pm
Audio guides
This audio guide features commentary by artist Jeff Koons, Scott Rothkopf, the Whitney's Nancy and Steve Crown Family Curator and Associate Director of Programs, Michelle Kuo, editor of Artforum magazine, and Amy Adler, the Emily Kempin Professor at New York University Law School.
Explore works from this exhibition
in the Whitney's collection
View 5 works
In the News
"He's a marvelous artist . . . a master with formidable aesthetic intelligence and a very great deal of nerve."
—The New Yorker (audio slide show)
"Lucid, challenging, brilliantly installed"
—The New York Times
"The perfect final show for the Whitney’s building."
—New York Magazine
"The Whitney show makes a strong case for the rigor and, often, the beauty of Koons’s art, justifying the avidity of the collectors for whom his works are coveted trophies."
—The New Yorker
"At 59, Mr. Koons may be one of the most famous living artists around—and the most expensive at auction. . . . But this will be the first time American audiences will see the sweep of his more than three-decade career in one gulp, 1978 to the present."
—The New York Times
"Jeff Koons, Man of the Hour"
—W Magazine
By the Numbers: The Facts and Figures Behind Jeff Koons’s Massive, Awe-Inspiring Show at the Whitney
—T Magazine
Video: "Jeff Koons' Philosophy of Perfection"
—Nowness
"If you’ve been having trouble sleeping lately, it’s probably due to the unquenchable feeling of excitement and anticipation roiling the city—if not the world—in the lead up to the Whitney Museum’s Jeff Koons: A Retrospective."
—Gallerist
"What Inspires Me Is Feeling" by Jeff Koons
—Art in America
"How to Make a Koons"
—Vanity Fair