Preview

Jeff Koons

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1740 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons’ Balloon Dog (Yellow)

This essay discusses the sculpture Balloon Dog (yellow) (1994-2000) by American artist Jeffrey Lynn Koons (b.1955). I will explain how Koons uses the Balloon Dog (yellow) to talk about both childhood experience and sexuality, and uses these ideas to manipulate the viewers’ emotion.

[pic]
Jeff Koons, 1994-2000, Balloon Dog (Yellow), [High chromium stainless steel with transparent color coating, 121 x 143 x 45 inches, 307.3 x 363.2 x 114.3 cm], The Steven and Alexandra Cohen Collection, Connecticut, CT

Looking at the shape of the 10 pieces of high chromium stainless steel, I can imagine a condom rather than a sausage because blowing a balloon looks like blowing a condom. I believe that I am correct in the influence of Koon’s balloon dog, “My work is about using sexuality as a tool to communicate.” (Koons, 1992, P.36) There are lots of sexuality in Koons’ art work, such as the Doctor’s Delight (1986) and the whole series of Made in Heaven (1989-1991). I think it is very clever that he uses sexuality as a tool to capture the viewers’ desire and exploit his viewers to develop his art work in their mind. Who does not have sexuality? Even a Chinese castrated eunuch would read an Erotic figure. As Koons’ father, Henry J Koons was an interior decorator; I had a thought that his father had influenced Koons’ art work. For the idea of emotion is very important for an interior decorate design. On a different level, Koons’ balloon dog can manipulate his viewers’ emotion. If you only look at a single piece of high chromium stainless steel, what would you feel? The pure sex is the only idea brings into my head because the smooth and tight surface of the high chromium stainless steel looks like two people are, skin to skin, having sex. In another way, the shape of the sculpture is giving me the optimistic and happy impression because the sculpture is in a balloon dog shape; I would imagine the party and celebration which are very positive.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Pet Milk Analysis

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “Pet Milk” by Stuart Dybek presents many interesting points about the human experience, between paying intense attention to detail, appealing to the audience’s emotions, and exploring the idea of “just living in the moment.”…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Viking Vase Analysis

    • 862 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The silver, jewel incrusted Viking- themed vase designed by George Paulding Farnham for Tiffany & Co., especially for the Pan American Exposition of 1901 in Buffalo, New York stands alone in a centrally located glass case in the American Silver Gallery located on the fourth floor of the Dallas Museum of Art in Dallas, Texas. Only standing eight inches high, the intricate details of the vase draws the viewer in and keeps them there as the eye runs over the delicate scroll and serpentine patterns of silverwork, colorful enameling and strategically placed garnets and citrines.…

    • 862 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This work of art would be a prime example of 20th century sculpture expressionism as well as the one above. This sculpture shows an actual life size woman and man , the love and unity between a man and a woman as they lay there both with their bodies positioned very closes together to bring comfort and togetherness. The woman looks like she is asleep and so does the man and both of their knees are bent, the woman has her knee positioned up and the man has his knee positioned down and the and the mans head is on the woman’s shoulder, they are both comforting one another and their minds to be at ease as long as they are near each other.…

    • 2052 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ingenue and the Gold Dress

    • 1918 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The focus of this paper will be “Ingenue” by Richard Judson Zolan and “The Gold Dress” by Bill Brauer. The focal point of both paintings is a beautiful woman and this is where the similarities stop. Zolan’s focus is completely within the boundaries of the painting while Brauer’s leads your eye off the plane insinuating there is more going on than is captured within the boundaries of the painting. The word ingenue refers to a naive, innocent young woman while the woman in “The Gold Dress” is definitely more provocatively situated. Both artists are Americans, Zolan from Chicago and Brauer from New York. Zolan studied under Louis Rittman, a personal friend and student of Claude Monet, the French impressionist, and Brauer under Frederico Castellon, a Spanish-American painter and illustrator of children’s books. Zolan’s style reflects the influence of Monet with the effects of light while Brauer is more sensual and moody, using deep intense colors and beautifully rendered curves. Both works of art are beautifully painted and express the great talent of both men.…

    • 1918 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Hat Rack Analysis

    • 1252 Words
    • 6 Pages

    An unassuming furniture fixture became Hat Rack when he chose to suspend it from the ceiling, remove the base that would elevate it from the floor, and call it “art”. Hat Rack stems from the lineage of to his most well-known and first readymade, Fountain (1917 Image 2). Under the guise of R.Mutt, Fountain was denied entry into an “open” exhibition on sculptures, where the only requirement was a 6$ registration fee. In an open letter, Marcel Duchamp argues that “Whether Mr. Mutt with his own hands made the fountain or not has no importance. He CHOSE it.” Through taking an ordinary facet of material life, Duchamp under the pseudonym of R.Mutt removed the “useful Significance” of the urinal, elevating it to the status of art, creating a new “Point of view” and “thought” for the…

    • 1252 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The significance of personal experience and cultural concerns in the work of Vanessa Beecroft and Lee Wen contribute to the overall concept and ideas the artists are trying to communicate with the audience.…

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “Panting like dogs” “Ape-like” “Like insects” – Descriptions of the boys that use animal imagery.…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    "I can, I will." Bobby is a young teenage boy going through a teenage pregnancy with his girlfriend. Throughout the story Bobby is trying to mature but he is having some problems with his life. the red balloon symbolizes as childhood, and the basketball symbolizes as freetime, also the arcade game symbolizes as childhood. even though Bobby matures at the end I believe he still had a long way to go.…

    • 511 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Jeff Koons is famous for taking kitschy ideas such as balloon animals which makes him extremely controversial because viewers either love or hate him. He is known for turning his ideas into giant works of art and also for making millions of dollars when selling these pieces. The “Balloon Dog” sculpture of a balloon puppy is not made of the typical balloon; instead it is made out a chrome metal painted a reddish pink. The mirrorized finish only adds to the piece because not only do you see a ten foot tall dog, you see yourself (the consumer) in the reflection. The sculpture was made in different colors and placed in different locations such as an exhibition in the Chateau de Versailles.…

    • 367 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Museum inventory number on the lower left corner of the canvas. It was sold by the Soviet…

    • 1506 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Art101

    • 6921 Words
    • 28 Pages

    Fig. 44 Sylvie Fleury, Serie ELA 75/K (Plumpity . . . Plump), 2000. Gold-plated shopping cart, plexiglas handle with vinyl text, rotating pedestal (mirror, aluminum, motor). 32 3/4 37 3/4 215/8 in. Pedestal 121/4 393/8 in.…

    • 6921 Words
    • 28 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    This research essay is about what puppy mills are and what they do, what a dog knows in its mind, and what it’s like when you first meet a dog and what it’s like for the dog when they first meet you.…

    • 1292 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Therefore, the distinction between the artist, the medium, and the artwork is obscured, since rats possess their own agency and are accountable for the artistic process as well as the final product. Rats as chimeras or hybrids, therefore, act as demonic animals that offer a prospect of re-envisioning animal subjectivity. Their unfamiliarity deconstructs the notion of pure classification, human cultural hierarchy and highlight the interspecies fluidity in a form of universal flesh. The lack of such distinction, in turn, induces depersonalization, emerging non-identity and transformation into multiplicity, which is another feature of becoming-animal. As Deleuze and Guattari argued, becoming-animal ‘always involves a pack, a band, a population, a peopling, in short a multiplicity’. This is perceivable in the display of the rats at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, where they are provided a habitat – an experimental playground in itself playing with the notion of exchange and transition. Through glass windows, exhibition visitors could observe rats and they could watch them back, forming a kind of pack just by experiencing one…

    • 811 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ellen Handler Spitz is a critically acclaimed American author, and University professor, best known for her specialist studies in the area of; psychology, children, and the arts, and how they intersect with one another. Ellen Handler Spitz’s, Image and Insight: Essays in Psychoanalysis and the Arts explores what ties the world of psychoanalysis to that of art, and establishes clear connections…

    • 1377 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Yet it is not as personal as The Kiss sculpture. The LOVE sculpture reveals love through pop art, which is more modern and contemporary. One may view the sculpture as focusing on the type of art and not the emotion. The letters represent more of an abstract yet simple art. It does not scream love as The Kiss sculpture does. Rather than showing feeling, it presents style and fashion. It is not use to speak to others such as The Kiss, but rather for decoration. To one, LOVE can merely represent the type of style instead of a certain…

    • 529 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays