Balloon Monkey (Blue), 2017 is a French Limoges porcelain with chromatic coating sculpture by Jeff Koons. From an edition of 999, this artwork is signed and numbered by the artist.
Need Help?
Artwork Details
French Limoges porcelain with chromatic coating
Size: Signed and numbered by the artist
Shipping & Returns
This artwork ships from an archive seller in the UK
Our archive is sourced from our community of vetted galleries and collectors to offer buyers ultra-rare artworks no longer available on the open market.
Orders can be returned within 14 days of receipt by emailing hello@artrepublic.com. For exclusions and details read our full returns policy.
Please note that your order may be subject to import duties and fees upon delivery, depending on your shipping destination.
Price match
30 day returns
Courier shipping
Jeff Koons is an American Neo-Pop artist, widely regarded as one of the most influential and controversial artists of the post war era. Jeff Koons plays with ideas of taste, pleasure, celebrity, and commerce - creating a style seen as ironic or tongue-in-cheek. He cultivates a media persona by hiring image consultants and placing strategic advertisements in high-class art publications - “I believe in advertisements and media completely. My art and my personal life are based in it.” His art prints and sculptures borrow widely from art-historical techniques and styles; although his practice blends several existing styles - pop, conceptual, craft - to create his own unique mode of expression.
Jeff Koons is an American Neo-Pop artist, widely regarded as one of the most influential and controversial artists of the post war era. Jeff Koons plays with ideas of taste, pleasure, celebrity, and commerce - creating a style seen as ironic or tongue-in-cheek. He cultivates a media persona by hiring image consultants and placing strategic advertisements in high-class art publications - “I believe in advertisements and media completely. My art and my personal life are based in it.” His art prints and sculptures borrow widely from art-historical techniques and styles; although his practice blends several existing styles - pop, conceptual, craft - to create his own unique mode of expression.