Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt Romerberg 60311 Frankfurt

  • Schirn Presse Koons Antiquity 3 2011 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Antiquity 3 2011 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 03a 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 03a 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 04a 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 04a 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 1 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 1 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 2 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 2 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 6 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Ausstellungsansicht 6 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Bluepoles 2000 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Bluepoles 2000 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Bracelet 1995 1998 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Bracelet 1995 1998 01
  • Schirn Presse Koons Lips 2000 01
    Title : Schirn Presse Koons Lips 2000 01


This summer, the Schirn Kunsthalle and the Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung will be devoting themselves to the work of the U.S. American artist Jeff Koons (born in 1955), who has played a pioneering role in the contemporary art world since the 1980s. The two concurrent shows will deliberately separate the sculptural and painterly aspects of his oeuvre and present each in a context of its own. Encompassing forty-five paintings, the presentation entitled ‘Jeff Koons. The Painter’ at the Schirn focuses on the artist’s structural development as a painter. With motifs drawn from a diverse range of high and pop-cultural sources, his monumental painted works combine hyper-realistic and gestural elements to form complexes as compact in imagery as they are in content. In the show ‘Jeff Koons. The Sculptor’ at the Liebieghaus, on the other hand, forty-four world-famous as well as entirely new sculptures by Jeff Koons enter into dialogues with the historical building and a sculpture collection spanning five millennia. Jeff Koons’s Antiquity, a new series in which he explores antique art and its central motif - Eros - will debut in Frankfurt on this occasion.

The exhibition ‘Jeff Koons. The Painter & The Sculptor’ is sponsored by Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Gas-Union GmbH, Kulturfonds Frankfurt RheinMain, and City of Frankfurt am Main.
Jeff Koons was born in York, Pennsylvania in 1955. He studied at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and is today one of the world’s most prominent contemporary artists. His works are to be found at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Tate Gallery in London, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Museum Ludwig in Cologne, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, and elsewhere. They have moreover been featured internationally in numerous solo exhibitions. Koons has been awarded many distinctions for his art, and his sculptures in the public realm - e.g. the monumental flower sculpture Puppy (1992) - have attained far-reaching popularity.

In his paintings and sculptures, Jeff Koons employs elements from the consumer world and ‘high culture’ alike, quotes artistic epochs as readily as he does objects from everyday life and advertising, and thus draws our attention again and again to such categories as beauty and desirability. Within this context, he has become an unequalled master of the interplay between the sublime and the banal. Although his works quote familiar motifs from the consumer context, it is not for the sake of kitsch and irony. In an interview he commented: ‘I work with things that are sometimes referred to as kitsch, even if kitsch per se has never interested me. I always try to convey self-confidence, a certain inner sense of security, to the viewer. My chief concern in my work is the viewer.’ Koons is interested ‘not in the complexity, but in the simplicity of being’ and its acceptance. This aspect finds expression in his oeuvre in elementary themes such as childhood or sexuality. Contrary to the long tradition of subjectivity in art, however, Koons constantly emphasizes artistic objectivity, working in the tradition of the ‘ready-made.’ Both his sculptures and his paintings have a particularly evocative and striking effect on the viewer through their exquisite craftsmanship and the lure of their surfaces.

The exhibition ‘Jeff Koons. The Painter’ at the Schirn - spread out almost over the gallery’s entire exhibition space - will be the first ever to offer a comprehensive overview of the artist’s painterly work, from the early machine paintings of the Luxury & Degradation series and the Made in Heaven works to the large-scale hand-painted work of the Celebration, Easyfun, Easyfun-Ethereal, Popeye, Hulk Elvis and new Antiquity series. The quotations from everyday life and various art-historical as well as general-historical epochs which Koons interweaves in his paintings are free-floating compositional elements assigned a modulatory or repetitive function. With the aid of image-editing computer programs, he succeeds in superimposing many layers and creating a new whole. By means of analytical attention to detail, he dissolves the pictorial composition which has thus evolved into a spectrum of multiply differentiated colors, only to have them then painstakingly transferred to canvas.
Cool, mechanical, and absolute perfection are the qualities that characterize these paintings which even though they have been painted by hand follow a clearly defined route. In the Made in Heaven series of 1989’91 that show the artist having sex with the Hungarian-Italian adult film actress and politician Cicciolina (Ilona Staller), who would later become his wife, the sculptures and paintings still differ distinctly with regard to motif. The mingling of the two media began in the context of Celebration, a series developed from 1994 onwards. A heart, a piece of cake, or a children’s birthday party hat, placed on shiny, colourful gift-wrapping paper, stand out threedimensionally while at the same time merging with the foil reflecting them, their background. In the two consecutive series Easyfun (1999’2000) and Easyfun-Ethereal (2000’2002) - collages of body parts, foods, landscapes, everyday objects, quotations from past art, etc. - foregrounds and backgrounds, centers and edges are virtually no longer distinguishable from one another. With them, Koons attains a simultaneity and hybridity which virtually defy decipherment. In his more
recent series, Antiquity, on the other hand, he draws from the bountiful repertoire of antique art and combines it with his own iconography.
The Schirn exhibition brings the quotations as well as the thematic and compositional development of Jeff Koons’s painting oeuvre to the fore. What is more, throughout the 140 meters of the gallery’s length, the paintings will create a virtually magnetic force that - far from keeping the viewer at arm’s length - will ply him with universally understandable pictorial worlds.

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