Jeff Koons — "I think that art is a way to accept yourself, and to accept others."
I think that art is a way to accept yourself, and to accept others.
I think that art is a way to accept yourself, and to accept others.
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"I'm not interested in making things that are going to be in a museum for the next 500 years. I'm interested in making things that are going to be in people's homes and that people are going to enjoy."
"I'm very interested in the idea of the readymade, and how it can be transformed."
"My work is about the pursuit of happiness."
"I think that art is about being able to communicate on a deep level."
"I always try to make work that is relevant to the present moment."
American contemporary artist whose Balloon Dog and Rabbit sculptures hold record sale prices for living artists; defines high-end commodified Pop. Closely associated with Damien Hirst (YBA-generation peer with similar production-line studio model) and Takashi Murakami (Superflat parallel from Japan). For an intellectual contrast, see Marina Abramović, Serbian-American performance artist — Abramović's body-on-the-line endurance work (The Artist Is Present, 2010) is the precise opposite of Koons's outsourced-fabrication, surface-shine commodification. Abramović's unmediated authorship vs Koons's factory production are the two cleanest poles of late-20th-century 'what is the artist for?' debate.
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