
Jeff Koons arrives at Espace Louis Vuitton Osaka with Paintings and Banality, on view from February 20 to July 5, 2026. The exhibition marks two milestones: twenty years of the Espaces Louis Vuitton and ten years of the Fondation Louis Vuitton Hors-les-murs programme. As part of this international initiative, works from the collection travel to Espaces Louis Vuitton in Tokyo, Munich, Venice, Beijing, Seoul, and Osaka, extending the Fondation’s curatorial vision to a wider global audience.
ART
The Osaka presentation traces Koons’s practice from his early 1980s series to recent monumental paintings. Across more than four decades, Koons has examined the friction between popular and high cultures. He draws from household objects, advertising language, children’s iconography, and art historical references, placing them into new aesthetic frameworks. Paintings and Banality outlines how Koons assigns value to objects and images often dismissed as trivial, revealing their symbolic and emotional charge.

Koons first gained attention in the mid-1980s with glass and plexiglass display cases containing manufactured objects and consumer goods. Works such as Three Ball 50/50 Tank (1985), presented in this exhibition, elevate basketballs into sculptural form. Vacuum cleaners, carpet cleaners, and sports equipment appear as emblems of aspiration and consumption, reframed as fine art. Through these gestures, Koons foregrounds the mythology of the American Dream and its visual language.
By 1988, Koons shifted from readymades to producing his own sculptural objects. The Banality series, represented in Osaka by Woman in Tub and Wild Boy and Puppy, combines cartoon imagery, pop references, and personal memory. The sculptures display technical precision and polished surfaces while engaging with mass culture aesthetics. Koons collapses distinctions between industry and art, pleasure and critique.

In his paintings, Koons expands the collage principle. Early works such as Bracelet (1995–1998) lead toward large-scale compositions from the Hulk Elvis series, including Landscape (Tree) II and Monkey Train (Birds) (2007), also on view. He layers disparate visual elements across expansive canvases, constructing dense surfaces filled with color, symbols, and graphic intensity. These paintings register a society immersed in circulating images and mediated desire.
Reflective surfaces remain central to Koons’s vocabulary. In sculptures such as Little Girl (1988), viewers encounter their own reflection within the work, entering the composition physically and psychologically. Mirrors, polished finishes, and trompe-l’oeil techniques complicate perception and memory, prompting active engagement.

Through exaggeration, collage, and refined fabrication, Koons interrogates how value attaches to objects and how images shape identity. Paintings and Banality presents this inquiry within a focused selection from the Collection, situating Osaka within a global dialogue that spans decades of artistic production.

















