'Hulk Elvis'. The show presents a charged mix of inflatable monkeys, geishas, birds, the Incredible Hulk, and the Liberty Bell jostle against realistically rendered landscapes and gestural paintings.
Gagosian Hong Kong is pleased to present “Hulk Elvis,” Jeff Koons’s first major solo exhibition in
Asia.
With sources as diverse as children’s art, comic book characters, and figures from classical
antiquity, Koons draws a common thread through cultural history with works that attempt to
touch the core of the human psyche. Working through conceptual constructs including the new,
the banal, and the sublime, his art has evolved from its literal, staid beginnings in readymades to
baroque creations that extol innocence, beauty, sexuality, and happiness in confounding
combinations of abstraction, figuration and sumptuous effect.
Works from the ongoing series Hulk Elvis range from precision-machined bronze sculptures—
inspired by an inflatable of the popular comic book hero and extruded in three dimensions—to
large-scale paintings that dazzle with energy and exactitude yet mystify with complex
permutations and combinations of figurative and abstract elements. The sculptures, whose
polychromed surfaces mimic the gloss of vinyl inflatables, pair the Hulk superhero with
incongruous props: a wheelbarrow filled with live flowers, a crew of inflatable toy animals, a
precise replica of the Liberty Bell. In Hulk (Organ) (2004–14), keys, pipes, and a pedalboard jut
out from the figure’s torso, legs, and shoulders; as the title suggests, the sculpture doubles as a
fully-functioning instrument. For Koons, the character not only represents Western comic book
culture, but also Eastern guardian gods: “They’re there as protectors, but at the same time they
can become very, very violent...The Hulks are like that, they’re really high-testosterone
symbols.”
In Hulk Elvis paintings, a charged mix of nudes and inflatable animals jostle against realistically
rendered landscapes, magnified gestural brushwork, and underlying dot screens. Titles—
Landscape (Waterfall II) (2007), Couple (Dots) Landscape (2009)—string together dominant
compositional elements. The exuberance of image and texture is rendered, paradoxically, with an
uncanny level of precision into a wealth of smooth, vivid detail, and images are manipulated and
interwoven into volatile palimpsests of color and form. In these spectacular pictorial inventions—
which reject any attempt by the eye to find a resting place—silhouettes slice through multiple
layers, contours of images surface rhythmically across the field of vision, and forms loom and
recede in the swirling fervor of color and line.
Since Jeff Koons’s first solo show in 1980, his work has been widely exhibited internationally in
solo and group exhibitions. Solo exhibitions include Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli
(2003); Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo (2004, traveled to Helsinki City Art Museum
in 2005); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2008); Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
(2008); “Jeff Koons: Versailles,” Château de Versailles, France (2008–09); Neue Nationalgalerie,
Berlin; and Serpentine Gallery, London (both 2009); Fondation Beyeler, Basel (2011); and Schirn
Kunsthalle and Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung, Frankfurt (2012).
Image: Jeff Koons, Hulk (Friends), 2004-2012, Polychromed bronze , 181 x 123.2 x 66 cm
Opening reception: Thursday, November 6th, from 6:00 to 8:00pm
Gagosian Gallery
7/F Pedder Building - 12 Pedder Street - Central, Hong Kong
Hours: Tue-Sat 11-7