Jeff Koons 'saddened' by French resistance to his giant tulips
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Jeff Koons 'saddened' by French resistance to his giant tulips
This file photo taken on November 06, 2012 shows Jeff Koons' sculpture "Tulips, 1995-2004" at Rockefeller Plaza in New York City. Jeff Koons will meet in the coming days Christophe Girard, deputy of the City of Paris, to talk about a place of implantation of his controversial sculpture, "Bouquet of tulips", he said on October 10, 2018 to the press. Jamie McCarthy / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP.



PARIS (AFP).- American pop artist Jeff Koons said Tuesday he was "saddened" by the negative reaction in France to a controversial sculpture he had gifted to Paris after the 2015 terror attacks on the city.

Koons' 12-metre (39-foot) tall "Bouquet of Tulips" will be inaugurated Friday at a site near the Petit Palais museum that is partly obscured from view by trees, ending a four-year row over its location.

It features a hand holding a huge bunch of multicoloured tulips, a gesture intended to mimic how the figure in the Statue of Liberty grasps her torch.

Koons created the monumental bouquet after being asked to come up with a work symbolising America's solidarity with France in the wake of the Paris attacks, which left 130 people dead.

But the proposed site of the work -- outside the Palais de Tokyo contemporary art museum, on an esplanade facing the Eiffel Tower -- quickly ran into resistance.

Koons told Le Figaro he was "saddened" by the row, which he claimed was triggered by "a lot of misunderstandings and misinformation".

The 64-year-old insisted it was not he who had chosen the Palais de Tokyo site, saying it was one of several locations proposed by the city of Paris and which he had thought would be "marvellous for my piece."

Last year, dozens of artists, gallery owners and officials penned an open letter objecting to the location, arguing it smacked of "product placement" by a artist known for his "spectacular and speculative" works.

Others argued it would block views of the Eiffel Tower.

In October, the city of Paris announced it had finally found a new location for the orphaned flowers in a garden behind the Petit Palais.

Koons said the controversy had been "painful" but the sculpture had given him a "magnificent opportunity to show my respect and love for France and the French."

Private donors financed the work's estimated 3.5-million-euro ($3.8-million) price tag.

Koons said the proceeds of the sculpture's copyright would be shared between associations representing terror victims and the city of Paris.


© Agence France-Presse










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