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Koons, Jeff

JEFF KOONS Puppy (After Koons), 1992

Regular price $4,500
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This "Puppy Platter" by Jeff Koons, created in 1992, is a special edition piece for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Limited to an edition of 125, this enamel on porcelain platter was made in Switzerland by Langenthal. Although it is not signed, each platter is numbered out of 125 on the verso.

Jeff Koons, one of the most prominent contemporary artists, is known for his playful and provocative works that challenge conventional boundaries between high and low art. The "Puppy Platter" reflects Koons' iconic style, capturing the whimsy and charm that his work is celebrated for. This limited edition platter is a unique and collectible piece, perfect for fans of Koons' art and contemporary art enthusiasts alike.

Details

Sku: YY9938

Artist: Jeff Koons

Title: Puppy (After Koons)

Year: 1992

Signed: No

Medium: Plate

Edition Size: 125

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 11 x 15 inches ( 28 x 38 cm )

Image Size: 11 x 15 inches ( 28 x 38 cm )

JEFF KOONS Puppy (After Koons), 1992

$4,500

About the Artist

Jeff Koons

Emerging out of the Pop Art tradition, Jeff Koons (b. 1955), became renowned for reproducing objects from everyday life, mainstream media and popular culture into installations, sculpture and painting. With a vision through the eyes of boyhood like Norman Rockwell and by minimizing the critical approach to objects like Andy Warhol, Jeff Koons has become one of the most successful living American artist to date. Emerging out of the Pop Art tradition, Koons became renowned for reproducing objects from everyday life, mainstream media and popular culture, removing them from their original context, and aggrandizing them to monumental statures in sculptures and paintings. Critics of Jeff Koons view his works as overly kitsch and his subject matter as irrelevant. Supporters of his work find it important that he incorporates everything relevant to our culture, in a style of his own which they define as being “pathologically optimistic” and “in a perfectionist pursuit of unconditional love”. "Celebration" encompassed a collection of hyper realistic large-scale stainless steel sculptures and large-scale paintings.
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