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Eye Exam
Manufacturing the Sublime

Jason Foumberg

Jeff Koons’ art has been claimed by so many different camps to mean so many things: the emptiness or artifice of culture, middle-class wish-fulfillment, relentless consumption, the production of desire, the triumph of the trite—what’s left? The art itself rarely strains to push these critiques or commentaries; it rather simply (or not so simply, as each piece is a feat of engineering) introduces itself as if on a parade route, happy to be here. The work seems to say that if you cannot delight in an oversized balloon animal made from shiny stainless steel, then you are likely deficient in the sense of joy. Has Koons succeeded in finding universal beauty?

The objects, most made of steel, are going to last forever. Universal and eternal. (A bit like God, eh?) It’s difficult not to become enthralled by the technical craft of each object. Nothing looks like it was made by hand, not even the paintings. Each object professes the ingenuity of technological mastery. Size matters, too. The scale of each piece—overblown—adds to the rapture. Koons is in the business of manufacturing the sublime. His products consistently try to fix the ephemeral in time. A cracked egg, a balloon, antiquated commodities, even sex, all made permanent. They will age well, too, like how Renaissance putti or primitive idols score a ten for charmingly dated. Their nostalgia is inbuilt.

Most of the objects are beyond-perfect reproductions. The toaster is a real toaster, but the inflatable pool toys and the flower arrangement—those are master works of trompe l’oeil. Ripples in the seam of the plastic inflatable lobster are transcribed into painted steel. The illusion is precise, much like the idealized body of an ancient Greek sculpture or the ornately textured robe of a Flemish Renaissance Madonna. Koons surely knows that everybody loves a little illusionistic trickery. Does this make him much different from a primetime TV magician? Does it make you like him less knowing that his “high” art panders to a low, common denominator? He’s just so damn likeable.

Chicago is currently the only stop for Koons’ retrospective. What does the work say to Chicago, or about its contemporary-art scene? His workshop currently produces hyper-realistic painting to an airless degree, beyond Chuck Close, and much like Damien Hirst, yet owing much to the pastiche style of 1980s David Salle. This isn’t the sort of painting that is in love with itself. Surely it is compositionally considered, but the paintings act as advertisements or illustrations for the sculptures on view. It is likely that Chicago’s best painters, most of them dealing in the abstract, will find little hope in Koons’ painted vision.

The city of Chicago features briefly, although importantly, on Koons’ resume. He attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago for one year, assisted artist Ed Paschke and also worked as a preparator at the MCA, the site of his current retrospective. Many of the new paintings feature iconic Imagist works in the background, but they also feature Popeye and a pretzel. These appropriations barely function as homage, and they mostly seem random. Yet if Koons’ painting style may not jive well with painters, surely his themes will. Curious associations and lighthearted humor appear as fresh as anything coming out of our art academies today.

Koons’ sculptural wonders are of a caliber rarely seen. Some of us have become very comfortable with abject sculpture, scrappy art and re-used materials. It’s a celebrated local style, like Old Style or dirty snow. How refreshing, then, to partake on a Disney-like trip among such wondrous, otherworldly statuary. Likely Koons will come to be resented for being so perfect.

Jeff Koons shows at the Museum of Contemporary Art, 220 East Chicago, (312)397-4010, through September 21.

(2008-06-03)




Also by Jason Foumberg

Eye Exam
What is the face of the new gay avant-garde? The “new guard,” according to Scott Ian Ray, artist and curator of “Yes,” an exhibit at the LAM timed to coincide with the thirtieth-annual International Mr. Leather festival, embraces wearable kink just as the old did, but the uniform has been shed in favor of multitude fashions, from gas masks to latex to superhero costumes
(2008-05-20)

Eye Exam
Is there a safe place to say the N-word? A new thematic group exhibition at the Renaissance Society pretends that the term can be used without consequence if uttered at a critical remove, or if it is a scholarly concern. That which otherwise has no place in print, on air, or on lips finds refuge when examined under the microscope of the art exhibition
(2008-05-06)

Eye Exam
It’s too tempting to not report "overheard at the art fair." In front of a painting by Neo Rauch, one shopper said to another, "The thing about art is you don’t have to like it." You don’t even have to see it, either; just order it by name. "Names, names, names, darling!" (Okay, that one was from "Absolutely Fabulous," but the sentiment holds.) For one whirlwind weekend we had to put our care for meaningful art practices on hold in the hope that Chicago could contribute to the still-thriving art market
(2008-04-29)

Portrait of the Artist
Clouds are "goddesses for idle men," Dianna Frid says to me, quoting Socrates. Frid has much to say on the subject of clouds, from the factual to the ponderous, for cloud-gazing is a practice that greatly informs her most recent body of sculpture
(2008-04-08)

Eye Exam
(2008-04-01)

Eye Exam
(2008-03-25)

Eye Exam
(2008-03-11)

Eye Exam
(2008-02-19)

Eye Exam
(2008-02-05)

Eye Exam
(2008-01-29)

Eye Exam
(2008-01-15)

Tip of the Week
(2008-01-15)






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