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JEFF KOONS AT ESPACE LOUIS VUITTON OSAKA: PAINTINGS AND BANALITY

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Published by Sugar & Cream, Tuesday 24 February 2026

Images courtesy of Louis Vuitton

Featuring Seven Key Works Selected from the Fondation Louis Vuitton Collection

From February 20 to July 5, 2026, Espace Louis Vuitton Osaka presents “Jeff Koons: Paintings and Banality – Selected Works from the Collection,” commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Espaces Louis Vuitton and a decade of the Fondation Louis Vuitton’s Hors-les-murs programme. The initiative disperses key works from the foundation’s collection across its global outposts—Tokyo, Munich, Venice, Beijing, Seoul and Osaka—extending its curatorial reach beyond Paris.

Rather than a full retrospective, the Osaka presentation offers a distilled trajectory of Koons’s practice, from his 1980s vitrines to his later monumental canvases. It traces how an artist synonymous with polish and provocation has persistently recalibrated the value of the everyday.

Koons first emerged in the mid-1980s with pristine display cases housing readymade consumer goods—vacuums, carpet cleaners, and, in the seminal Three Ball 50/50 Tank (1985), basketballs suspended in a state of engineered equilibrium. These objects, icons of the American Dream, were elevated to art through context, lighting and immaculate presentation. The gesture was both deadpan and radical: a reframing of commodity as cultural artefact.

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By 1988, Koons shifted from readymade to fabrication. The Banality series—represented here by Woman in Tub and Wild Boy and Puppy—merged cartoon vernacular, sentimental kitsch and autobiographical memory into technically virtuosic sculptures. Executed with industrial precision, these works dissolve distinctions between high art, mass production and entertainment aesthetics. Surface becomes ideology; gloss becomes argument.

His paintings extend this logic into the realm of image saturation. From Bracelet (1995–1998) to the Hulk Elvis cycle, including Landscape (Tree) II and Monkey Train (Birds) (2007), Koons layers disparate motifs—advertising fragments, inflatable toys, pastoral scenes—onto monumental canvases. The compositions operate like visual ecosystems, dense with references that mirror the overstimulated condition of contemporary culture.

For a design-conscious audience, Koons’s relevance lies in his command of fabrication and perception. Reflective stainless steel, mirror finishes and meticulous trompe-l’œil techniques transform spectators into participants. In works such as Little Girl (1988), the viewer’s reflection is not incidental but integral, folding identity into object. The gallery becomes a calibrated environment where material, light and scale choreograph experience with near-architectural precision.

Critically, Koons remains a polarising figure. Admirers view his embrace of popular imagery as a democratic expansion of aesthetic territory—an assertion that pleasure, sentimentality and mass culture possess legitimate symbolic weight.

In Osaka Paintings and Banality frames Koons’ four-decade inquiry not as spectacle alone, but as a sustained investigation into value: how objects accrue meaning, how images construct identity, and how art transforms the trivial into an arena for reflection and desire.

Espace Louis Vuitton Osaka offers a rare occasion to witness and experience with a carefully curated selection of Jeff Koons’s work.

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