Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Grab the Wheel may refer to: "Grab the Wheel", 2002 song by The Heroine Sheiks from the album Siamese Pipe "Grab the Wheel", 2016 song by Lil Uzi Vert from their ...
Balloon Dog is a series of sculptures by the American artist Jeff Koons. There are different versions of this sculpture, made between 1994 and 2000, with each having a different color: blue, magenta, yellow, orange and red. All versions of the sculpture are made of stainless steel, using different coatings to produce the different colors. [1] [2]
Koons was born in York, Pennsylvania, to Henry Koons and Nancy Loomis.His father [7] was a furniture dealer and interior decorator. His mother was a seamstress. [8] When he was nine years old, his father would place old master paintings that Koons copied and signed in the window of his shop in an attempt to attract visitors. [9]
Exchanging the gallery space for a transparent box in space, the American artist Jeff Koons had a new sculpture series hitch a ride with Odysseus (also known as “Odie,” or IM-1), which began ...
It was a different kind of space race. In 2022, artist Jeff Koons announced that his sculpture, Moon Phases, would be blasted into space by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and sent to the moon aboard a ...
Koons’ version of The Three Graces, however, is anything but subdued. Towering and gleaming in mirror-polished stainless steel, the sculpture reflects the 16th-century courtyard of the Alhambra ...
The film features interviews with people prominently involved in contemporary art and the market for it, including; artists Jeff Koons, Larry Poons, Njideka Akunyili Crosby and Gerhard Richter, George Condo, Marilyn Minter art dealer Gavin Brown, Sotheby's executive vice president Amy Cappellazzo, auctioneer Simon de Pury, collectors Stefan ...
In 1988, Jeff Koons made three identical porcelain sculptures of Bubbles and Jackson. [15] At the time, each sculpture was said to be worth $250,000. [16] Koons once said of the pop star, "If I could be one other living person, it would probably be Michael Jackson." [15] The art piece went on to become one of Koons' best known works. [17]