Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (2024)

Look Closer

From advertising and commerce to social-mobility and youth culture, explore some of the themes behind Jeff Koons’s art

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Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (1)

Introduction

Oversized ornaments, children’s toys and celebrities have all featured in the art of Jeff Koons. He uses these unlikely subjects to poke fun at comfortable suburban lives and tastes, and criticise a contemporary culture driven by commerce. He has also antagonised the art world by placing adverts in magazines questioning its judgements and authority on what is good and bad art.

Using key artworks in the ARTIST ROOMS collection this resource takes an in-depth look at the work of Jeff Koons.

artist and showman

Jeff Koons developed a talent for drawing and painting at a young age. His father, an interior designer and decorator, exhibited his son’s work in the showroom of his decorating business. This early understanding of the role that commerce plays in art, as well as the importance of self-promotion, can be seen throughout Jeff Koons’s career.

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (2)

After graduating from art school in Baltimore in 1976, Jeff Koons moved to New York. He began working at the membership desk of the MoMA (Museum of Modern Art, New York) and quickly became known for his impressive salesmanship. He then began a career as a commodities trader on Wall Street to fund his art practice. (A commodities broker is a trader who buys and sells things such as foodstuffs, energy, metals and currencies to make a profit for his clients.)

His first success in the art world came in the 1980s. The 1980s are often referred to as ‘the decade of greed’. Koons’s exploration of themes such as commerce, mortality and inequalities within contemporary society can perhaps be seen as a response to this 80s spirit of decadence and moral decline.

Art Movements

Jeff Koons has been associated with pop art, conceptual art and minimalism.

His use of themes and subjects from popular culture (such as toys, ornaments and advertising) is characteristic of pop art. But Koons’s work also has qualities that suggest minimalist art. He uses modern materials and his works show little obvious personal expression. His orderly, grid-like display of objects in his series The New also suggests minimalism. Though Koons himself said:

I have always placed order in my work not out of respect for minimalism, but to give the viewer a sense economic security.

Koons often uses ordinary everyday objects – such as vacuum cleaners and basketballs – in his art. In doing this he carries on a tradition first used by artist Marcel Duchamp in the early twentieth century. Duchamp is often referred to as the father of conceptual art. Duchamp chose objects including a bottle rack, a shovel and a urinal and called them readymade artworks, describing his selection of these objects as a creative act. By ignoring the object’s ‘useful’ function and presenting it as an artwork with a title in a gallery, Duchamp gave the objects a new meaning.

The New

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (3)

If one of my works was to be turned on, it would be destroyed.

Jeff Koons

In 1980 Jeff Koons exhibited a series of sculptures called The New at the New Museum of Contemporary Art on New York. The sculptures consisted of vacuum cleaners displayed in clear plastic boxes and lit by fluorescent lights.

By taking a mass-produced, everyday object associated with domestic, suburban life and presenting it as art he raised its status from the ordinary to the iconic. The sculptures explore the way fantasies and desires can be transferred on to everyday objects. At the time that this sculpture was created, the American company Hoover dominated the carpet cleaning industry. By using this well-known brand for his sculpture and including its name in the work’s title he highlights commerce and success. The vacuum cleaners, like much of Koons work, also suggest comparisons with the human body. They look a little like people standing in a neat row.

They’re being displayed just for their integrity of birth – that they’re not used, they’re not functioning, they’re not collecting dirt, but they’re just displaying their integrity of birth. It was to also make a play with aspects of the eternal and an ultimate kind of state of being.

Koons's vacuum cleaner sculptures can be described as readymades.

One of the characteristics of readymade art is that by cancelling an object’s function (what it was made for) it becomes art.

Koons famously said if the hoovers were turned on, the work would be destroyed.

  • What do you think he meant by this?
  • Why would the work be destroyed if it was ever used for its original function?

Have a Go: Create a Readymade Artwork

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (4)

Create your own readymade using an everyday object. It might help to have a look at more readymade artworks in Tate's collection.

  • Choose an everyday object from around your home. It can be anything – from something you use in your kitchen to something you wear.
  • Think about whether the object has any significance for you and if that matters. Think about ways you could present the object to remove it from its function (what it is used for) and make it appear like art.

Equilibrium

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (5)

I want to have an impact in people’s lives. I want to communicate to as many people as possible. And the way to communicate with the public right now is through TV and advertising. The art world is not effective right now.

Jeff Koons

Jeff Koons continued to use readymades in his Equilibrium series of artworks created between 1983 and1993. The series brings together art, commerce and sport. Koons wanted to reveal how consumer products communicate cultural values. He also wanted to reflect the insecurity surrounding social status and social mobility – the opportunities that people have, to make a better life for themselves.

Like the vacuum cleaners, the basketballs in Four Rows 1983–93 are presented as if they are on display in a shop. They are packaged in their original boxes and shown in a glass case. This removes the basketballs from what they were made for – playing sport. Presented within glass cases (or vitrines), the basketballs become precious objects. They look a little like religious relics, something to be worshipped. Koons also explores the idea of mortality – or death – in these artworks. Sealed within the glass cases the balls are not capable of movement, they appear lifeless.

Other works in the series include cases containing basketballs suspended in liquid, such as Three Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (Two Dr J Silver Series, Spalding NBA Tip-Off) 1985, and advertisem*nts featuring basketball stars encouraging consumers to buy Nike products. These suggest the players’ success is indebted to the brand, and also perhaps that success can be bought.

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (6)

Seen together, the pieces captured the aspirations of young working-class Americans who want to find fame and wealth through sport. The title of the series Equilibrium could be seen to refer to the social equilibrium created by sport, as well as the more literal reference of the balancing of the basketballs. The word 'equilibrium' also means things remaining the same or unchanged. So Koons might also be suggesting that despite working-class aspirations being pursued through sport, nothing much changes.

Equilibrium dealt with states of being that really don’t exist, like a fish tank with a ball hovering in equilibrium, half in and half out of the water. This ultimate or desired state is not sustainable – eventually the ball will sink to the bottom of the tank. Then there were Nike posters, which acted as sirens that could take you under. I looked at at the athletes in those posters as representing the artists of the moment, and the idea that we were using art for social mobility the way other ethnic groups have used sports. We were middle-class white kids using art to move up into another social class.

Jeff Koons

The repetition and references to commercial packaging and youth culture suggest the ideas and visual imagery of pop art. But the sculptures, with their formal grid-like arrangement, also refer to minimal art.

  • What object or image could be used to represent an aspiration (goal or desire) you have?
  • How would you present that object or image?
  • What object or image do you think could be used to represent an aspiration of people more generally in society today?

Banality

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (7)

The artworks that Jeff Koons is best known for belong to his Banality series. This series, from 1988, is a celebration of popular culture and the banal. (The word banal describes things that are unoriginal, obvious and boring.) Koons's Banality series includes artworks made from ceramics, porcelain and painted wood. The themes are drawn from images and icons in popular culture and often feature animals. For example Michael Jackson and Bubbles 1988 shows pop star Michael Jackson with his pet chimpanzee.

To make his Banality sculptures, Koons used the type of fine materials and crafts that appeal to middle class tastes. However the subjects he chose were popular or kitsch. Winter Bears 1988, looks like the sort of cheap souvenir that someone might bring back from an Alpine holiday. But Koons commissioned skilled woodworkers in Southern Germany and Northern Italy to make the sculpture. For generations these craftsmen have made fine wood carvings for churches. By hiring them to make his sculptures, Koons added a sense of wonder and spirituality to the work.

Having worked as a commodities trader to fund his early art career, Jeff Koons is very used to the commercial world. He uses the language of advertising throughout his work. As part of his Banality series he created the Art Magazine Ads 1988 campaign. Koons predicted that the art world would respond with hostility to his Banality works so he placed advertisem*nts in art magazines mocking the art-loving readers of the magazines and defending his position. The adverts put across his thoughts and beliefs about art and the art world. Koons himself appeared in the adverts posing in different roles with a variety of people and props. Like the exhibition itself, these photographs were deliberately provocative. They questioned the value of ‘high art’ (the type of art traditionally seen in galleries and museums), and championed popular culture.

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (8)

The Artforum ad shows me in front of a blackboard indoctrinating very young children – children really too vulnerable for such an indoctrination into my art. I really wanted to direct that sense of their vulnerability to the Artforum readership, the people who hate me, to make them just grit their teeth and hate me even more because I was taking their future. I was getting at their future, the youth of tomorrow.

Jeff Koons

With slogans such as ‘Exploit the Masses / Banality as Saviour’, the ads reflected Koons’s desire to ‘remove bourgeois [middle class] guilt and shame in responding to banality:

I was telling the bourgeois to embrace the thing that it likes. Don’t divorce yourself from your true being, embrace it. Don’t try to erase it because you’re in some social standing now and you’re ambitious and you’re trying to become some upper class.

The tradition of artists employing crafts people to make artworks has a long history.

  • Why do you think it is important to Jeff Koons that he uses specialist technicians to make his artworks, such as the sculptures in his Banality series?
  • Why do you think it might be controversial for an artist to commission someone else to make their artworks?

Imagine, like Jeff Koons, you are going to run a series of pages in a magazine about yourself, your ideas about art (or design) and your tastes. (This could be for an art magazine or for a fashion or home interiors magazine)

Create a collage including an image of yourself and other images to communicate your ideas about the art or design that you like.

How would you make a convincing case for your ideas and taste about these objects or artworks? Think about the type of people who might read these magazines and how you would ‘talk’ to them.

Made in Heaven

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (9)

Made in Heaven is a series of artworks made by Koons in 1989-91. It includes paintings, and sculptures made from marble, glass and wood with subjects including flowers, animals and cherubs. The works brought together Koons's ongoing interests in desire, found objects (or readymades) and the Baroque. (The Baroque is an ornate, extravagant style of art, architecture and music that flourished in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries.) Bourgeois Bust – Jeff and Ilona 1991 explores the theme of love. The sculpture, carved in marble, shows Jeff Koons in a tight embrace with his wife, adult film star and model Ilona Staller, also known as la Cicciolina.

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (10)

Just married, the newly-weds gaze at each other, transfixed. Staller, with her plaited hair and string of pearls appears like Venus, the Roman goddess of love. In this series, for the first time in his career, Koons used his private life as a metaphor for ideas about the fulfilment of desires. The couple is presented in a glorified way and the title indicates their social status.

If I made it and achieved this bourgeois class, and if Ilona has, then absolutely anybody can … It might not be their desire in life to reach the bourgeois class, but I am always trying to present three–dimensional social mobility for people. That they can achieve things and move within the world

Jeff Koons

For his Made in Heaven series, Jeff Koons made his personal life the subject of the work.

  • Do you think this makes it different from his other artworks?
  • Does knowing that he is using himself and his personal relationship and desires, make you respond to the work in a different way?

Think about someone you would like to immortalise and how you can do this creatively. This could be someone you know personally or someone in the public eye that you admire.

  • What is it about them or their character or achievements that you like and how would you put this across? If it is someone close to you, how would you express your feelings about them?
  • You could plan or design a piece of public art (art that is shown in a public place). This could be a sculpture, poster or billboard, or a video. Or your immortalising artwork could be a poem, song lyrics or piece of creative writing.

Easyfun

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (11)

Art is about something that you can carry around inside yourself; it’s not about the objects – they’re just carriers of the ability to stimulate and activate the viewer’s mental and physical state.

Jeff Koons

The Easyfun series includes a series of large brightly coloured mirrors in the shape of cartoon animal heads. The mirrors are displayed together creating an installation that suggests grandeur. They are also displayed at eye level 'transforming the gallery into a child’s room.’ It is impossible to look at these giant works without seeing yourself in their polished, reflective surfaces.

Framing the viewer within a fantastical world of ponies, elephants and hippos, the artworks recall a childish way of looking at the world and a sense of self-discovery. Koons described them as ‘just as simple as a pack of Crayola’, (Crayola are a famous brand of children’s crayons). The artist selected the colours specially to complement the individual animals.

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (12)
Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (13)

The two words which form the title of the series 'easy' and 'fun' provoke the question, should fun ever be difficult or hard? Easy fun implies instant pleasure or gratification and suggests perhaps something more adult than what seems at first playful.

The mirrors also respond to our narcissistic (or self-obsessed) desire for satisfaction, fulfilling adult fantasies and pleasures. Reflection, both in mirrors or water, often symbolises Narcissus. In Greek mythology Narcissus was a very beautiful man who fell in love with his own reflection.

The Easyfun series also includes several colourful abstract paintings with cartoon-like forms that are painted in a photorealist way. (Photorealism is a style of painting that is meticulously detailed and looks like photographs.) The original source images for these paintings look like commercial images from cheap advertising; the things depicted include junk food, kitchen utensils, frozen vegetables and body parts such as lips.

What do you think? Childhood memories

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (14)
  • Do the artworks from Jeff Koons’s Easyfun series make you think of your own childhood?
  • What kind of memories and ideas do these shaped mirrors suggest?

Can you think of any other artworks that are activated by the viewer? (That the viewer interacts with). Here are some ideas from Tate’s collection.

Plan an artwork that invites viewers to interact with it. What kind of media or material would you use?

Like Jeff Koons you could use mirrors, or think about sensors and other interactive technology. Or your artwork could be something people actively engage with – like an art playground. Design artworks that people can swing on , climb on, or slide down

Popeye

Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (15)

One of the lines that Popeye is best known for is, 'I am what I am, and to transcend to object art, which is about the external world and other prople, you have to accept yourself first.

Jeff Koons

Caterpillar Chains 2003 is from a series of sculptures called Popeye. Popeye is a popular character in an American comic strip. The sculptures and paintings in the series focus on images and objects associated with childhood.

Caterpillar Chains looks exactly like a huge inflatable pool toy. It looks as weightless as the original toy that inspired it, and is suspended from eight bright red steel chains. But the sculpture is in fact cast in aluminium and coated in shiny, bright paint. Koons described the caterpillar, as well as the other pool toy animals in this series (which includes dolphins and lobsters), as being about ‘celebration and childhood’. He encourages his audience to find new value in this cheap everyday object.

Take a tour of Jeff Koons's studio and find out more about the materials and techniques he uses to make his extraoridnary sculptures.

The sculptures from this series are often made up of very different elements that are unsettling. The caterpillar looks weightless but is suspended from eight bright red steel chains. The chains suggest imprisonment or entrapment. Koons is perhaps hinting at something darker, such as abuse. The Popeye sculptures also seem to comment on themes relating to commerce and leisure as with the earlier Banality series. The chains could suggest that we are shackled to shopping and commodities.

Koons however says that his choice of materials and the appearance of the sculptures are about preservation. He wants to ensure that these fragile childhood objects survive. ‘The most important thing to me is the preservation of the object – the sense that it has been created to survive and that its longevity is certain.’

Look at Jeff Koons’s Caterpillar (with chains) 2002.

  • Did your response to the work change knowing that it was cast metal rather than a light inflatable? Do you think the material affects the work's meaning?
  • Are there any toys or childhood objects you remember as being important to you? If, like Koons, you decided to preserve and celebrate them in art how would you do this?
  • Picture your childhood object on a big scale. What materials would you use to make it? How would a big version of your treasured toy change how you see it?

  • Create an artwork representing your own interpretation of a contemporary cartoon figure, or superhero.
  • Collect source images to make a collage. These can be from comics, magazines or pictures from websites. Cut out, arrange and layer these images onto a large piece of paper.
  • If you have a computer and picture editing tools, use these to manipulate your superhero pictures. Change the scale and colours or distort the image. What effect does this have on how your superhero appears?
Jeff Koons: Banality, Decadence and Easyfun | Tate (2024)

FAQs

What is Jeff Koons most famous piece? ›

Balloon Flower (Red)

Koons' most famous works to date are his towering sculptures inspired by balloon animals. This one stands over ten feet tall and weighs in excess of a ton. Its shiny exterior, according to the artist, is intended to "manipulate and seduce".

What art movement was Jeff Koons part of? ›

Art Movements

Jeff Koons has been associated with pop art, conceptual art and minimalism. His use of themes and subjects from popular culture (such as toys, ornaments and advertising) is characteristic of pop art. But Koons's work also has qualities that suggest minimalist art.

How much did Jeff Koons' balloon dog sell for? ›

Koons sold a giant version of his balloon dog for $58.4 million in 2013, and then six years later, a rabbit sculpture of his sold for $91 million — setting a record for a living artist.

Why did Jeff Koons make Pink Panther? ›

The artwork can be seen as a reflection of a society that lacks depth, and is constantly wavering between materiality and meaning. Pink Panther, at its core, is a postmodernist piece. It celebrates randomness without believing in a higher meaning or an absolute truth.

What is Jeff Koons' most expensive piece? ›

Rabbit, 1986

'Rabbit' is a 1986 sculpture by Jeff Koons and the idea arose from his 1979 work 'Inflatable Flower and Bunny'. One of the versions of 'Rabbit' was sold for $91.1 million at Christie's, which is the highest price for the work of a living artist ever sold at an auction.

Why is Jeff Koons so popular? ›

His career has been marked by innovation, controversy, and a willingness to push the boundaries of art and popular culture. Koons' works have become some of the most expensive and sought-after pieces in the world, while his influence can be seen in the works of countless contemporary artists.

How did Jeff Koons change the world? ›

Koons managed to shock the art world with one audacious work after another, from displaying commercial vacuum cleaners and basketballs as his own art to making porcelain reproductions of kitsch objects to showing homemade p*rnography.

Does Jeff Koons actually make his art? ›

Jeff Koons admits that he does not produce any of his works himself. For this he employs a team of more than 100 assistants based in Chelsea, near New York, who produce the custom designs of the “creative genius”.

What does the balloon dog symbolize? ›

According to Koons, the inflatable animals are a representation of breath and human life. Exuding optimism, the sculptures create a juxtaposition between the everyday and the monumental.

How much does Jeff Koons pay his employees? ›

Jeff Koons pay FAQs

The average Jeff Koons hourly pay ranges from approximately $21 per hour (estimate) for a Painting Assistant to $54 per hour (estimate) for a Project Manager In Sculpture.

Why did Jeff Koons make Michael Jackson and Bubbles? ›

Koons claims that he wanted to depict Jackson as a new redemptive figure who enables people to discover their own cultural mythology. Michael Jackson and Bubbles has also been read as a symbol of the human desire for self-discovery.

Why is Jeff Koons balloon dog so famous? ›

One of the most recognizable artworks of the 21st century, Jeff Koons' Balloon Dog sculptures have become emblematic of contemporary art's elevation of the everyday into the realm of spectacle and celebration.

Why did Jeff Koons make puppy? ›

At 12.4 metres tall, supporting 55,000 kgs of soil and 60,000 flowering plants, the 1996 iteration of Puppy was anything but dimunitive. While Puppy was created as a symbol of love and happiness, it was firmly embedded in Koons' vernacular of late capitalist excess.

Who is the woman in Pink Panther Jeff Koons? ›

Pink Panther depicts a 1950s pin–up, modeled on the American B–movie actress Jayne Mansfield, with one hand covering a breast bared by a garment that has slipped down—a predicament for which Mansfield was notorious.

Why is the balloon dog famous? ›

One of his most recognizable works is the “Balloon Dog” sculpture that defies perceptions and leaves the viewers mesmerized with its adorable cheerfulness. The deceptive simplicity of this artwork holds deep meaning and fully captures the artistic idea of the artist.

What is Jeff Koons' balloon dog made of? ›

Each of his sculptures is made with great precision from stainless steel and finished with a blue, magenta, orange, red or yellow translucent coating.

How much is Jeff Koons sculpture worth? ›

The most ever paid for a Jeff Koons sculpture was a whopping $91,075,000 for the piece. This is an outlier, but even so many of Koons major works have sold between 15 and 40 million dollars, making him one of the most profitable artists in the world today.

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