NEW YORK, NY.- On November 12th,
Christies Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale promises to be a landmark occasion for the art market when Christies will offer Jeff Koons Balloon Dog (Orange), one of the most recognizable images in todays canon of art history. This monumental work, with its flawless reflective surface and glorious color, is the most beloved of all contemporary sculptures. Its spectacular form has been celebrated around the world, having graced the rooftop of New Yorks Metropolitan Museum of Art, Venices Grand Canal, and Versailles Palace outside Paris. It has become an icon of Popular vernacular, adored by the public and collectors for its unabashed celebration of childhood, hope and innocence. Estimated at $35 55 million, Balloon Dog (Orange) is expected to surpass the artists current record of $33.6 million, established in 2012 by Christies New York with Koons chromatic Tulips (now on display at the Wynn Casino Las Vegas), and is set to make history for the sale of a work by a contemporary artist. Balloon Dog (Orange) is part of the Brant Collection and proceeds from the sale will be used to help fund future activities of The Brant Foundation Art Study Center in Greenwich, CT.
At a time when collectors are propelling rare master works to new price levels at auction, the sale of Jeff Koons Balloon Dog will be a spectacular event for buyers around the world. This is a definitive icon of the 20th century. The Balloon Dog is the Holy Grail for collectors and foundations. In private hands, the work has always communicated the prominence and stature of its owner. Like Andy Warhols portrait of Marilyn, which influenced Koons choice of the orange metallic color for Balloon Dog, it is the ultimate masterpiece, instantly recognizable to the art world and public alike. To own this work immediately positions the buyer alongside the very top collectors in the world and transforms a collection to an unparalleled level of greatness, stated Brett Gorvy, Chairman and International Head of Post-War & Contemporary Art.
A timeless and universal monument to the joys of childhood, Jeff Koons takes the simple transitory form of a party balloon animal, and blows it up to a heroic scale. Creating the illusion of weightlessness with reflective stainless steel of gigantic proportions, the work is considered the supreme example from Koons highly desired and acclaimed Celebration Series, begun in the early 1990s.The series evolved from Koons' desire to recreate the ecstatic experiences of a child's enjoyment of the world with universal signifiers. His sculptures recall Constantin Brancusi's pristine, polished forms with their rounded, flawless surface.
Jeff Koons declared, I think the balloon dog is really a symbol like the Trojan horsesomething kind of mythic, and an aspect of a history. The work has been equally lauded by critics: described as "an awesome presence
a massive durable monument" by Amy Dempsey, while Jerry Saltz wrote that he was, wowed by the technical virtuosity and eye-popping visual blast (
) its so perfect it exists in some undisturbed eternal state. Call it the reflective sublime.
Five years ago, it was the Celebration series that shot Koons to newfound prominence in the market and in museums, achieving the highest price for a living artist at auction with the sale of his Balloon Flower (Magenta) at Christies in London in 2008. Since then, Jeff Koons has had important museum shows at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Chateau de Versailles in France, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, the Serpentine Gallery in London, the Beyeler Foundation in Basel, Switzerland and the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt, Germany.
Inspired by Andy Warhols five iconic Marilyn paintings, Balloon Dog (Orange) was conceived as one of five unique Balloon Dog sculptures in individual metallic colors. Each example has an outstanding pedigree, belonging to the worlds greatest and most revered private collectors: The Broad Art Foundation- Balloon Dog (Blue); Steven Cohen Balloon Dog (Yellow); Dakis Joannous Deste Foundation for Contemporary art - Balloon Dog (Red); Francois Pinault Balloon Dog (Magenta).
Balloon Dog (Orange) was one of the first of the Balloon Dogs to be fabricated, and was acquired by Greenwich collector Peter Brant in the late 1990s. As well as owning the foremost collection of works by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat in private hands, Brants focus as a pioneering collector and passion for artists such as Jeff Koons, Christopher Wool, Richard Prince, Cindy Sherman, Julian Schnabel, John Currin and Elizabeth Peyton has had a major impact on their markets and amongst collectors inspired by his vision. The Brant Collection contains the essential Koons grouping, including; Pink Panther, 1988, the monumental flowering Puppy, 1992, and Balloon Dog (Orange).
Since the mid 1980s, the work of Jeff Koons has remained core to my collection. Along with the monumental Puppy, 1992, Balloon Dog (Orange) is recognized as his masterpiece. The sale of this work will provide future funding to enrich and expand the vision of The Brant Foundation Art Study Center, declared Peter Brant.