adventures in pet walking
every thing in its own basket
arm gun die
mussel women
endless months of housework
due cani
big tooth, big shark
a victorian boy, growing up
our allies need eggs
in a brown study until pink popped in
mid-century melee
her majesty obscured
second homage to joseph cornell
pig psychedelic
a chaos of feelings
my abstract home
the man who rode with death
underworld grotesque
gotta put a dame on the cover
let it bleed
inspired by constructivism
blue jeans
overwhelmed by klee (an homage)
like leaves on a muddy stream
the jaws of time
rain rain go away
pinkanalysis
where do we go from here?
dreaming of railroad tracks and pedestal
homage to paul klee
the centerpiece for the banquet was floating away
prunus myrabalanus rotundus
an american in cincinnati
abstract of abstracts
protect us from madonnas and mad cows
kitchen in ocean park no. 67
once more with feeling
dancing 'round an iceberg
See also...
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
1 005 visits
this collage could not possibly be as ugly as the soul of jeff koons
Cut-paper collage (irregular) 8" x 10"
For a long time I have been infuriated by Koons's willful ugllness—not just in his art, but in his whole life, for he himself says they are one and the same. The huge show devoted to him at the Whitney, with both the laudatory and the vituperative things people are saying, has made me quite miserable. It's not my usual style to be so deeply annoyed by someone I have never met—not at all. Well...except maybe Dick Cheney.
Everything in this collage is either from a photograph of Koons's art, from something said in the press about him, or from one of his many advertisements in the media for himself. (One of his ads is the source of the "Exploit the Masses" and "Banality as Saviour" phrases, written on a blackboard in front of little kids.) To be fair to Koons, as much as I can be, I included a photo of his play-doh sculpture, complete with plinth and favorable press remark, without cutting it up in any way.
I'll be curious to hear whether y'all think Koons's work is ugly, or whether Koons is ugly on the inside. I already know my collage is hideous! =laugh=
Say, is there any chance this can be a late entry for Illustration Friday's topic of "Money"? It definitely fits!
For a long time I have been infuriated by Koons's willful ugllness—not just in his art, but in his whole life, for he himself says they are one and the same. The huge show devoted to him at the Whitney, with both the laudatory and the vituperative things people are saying, has made me quite miserable. It's not my usual style to be so deeply annoyed by someone I have never met—not at all. Well...except maybe Dick Cheney.
Everything in this collage is either from a photograph of Koons's art, from something said in the press about him, or from one of his many advertisements in the media for himself. (One of his ads is the source of the "Exploit the Masses" and "Banality as Saviour" phrases, written on a blackboard in front of little kids.) To be fair to Koons, as much as I can be, I included a photo of his play-doh sculpture, complete with plinth and favorable press remark, without cutting it up in any way.
I'll be curious to hear whether y'all think Koons's work is ugly, or whether Koons is ugly on the inside. I already know my collage is hideous! =laugh=
Say, is there any chance this can be a late entry for Illustration Friday's topic of "Money"? It definitely fits!
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.