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Jeff Koons talks to Katy Siegel - '80s Then - Interview

ArtForum,  March, 2003  

KATY SIEGEL: Let's begin with your move to New York from Chicago. What year did you come here?

JEFF KOONS: I originally hitchhiked here at the end of '76, but I didn't officially move to New York until January '77. In Chicago I went to the School of the Art Institute, and I enjoyed it because I was studying with people whose work and passion I really respected, like Ed Paschke and Jim Nutt. But I lost interest in my own work, which had been in kind of a personal iconography, and I realized that different things were happening in New York--different communities, the New Wave music scene. And that's what really pulled me here.

KS: Were you part of the New Wave scene?

JK: I had a friend from Chicago who knew people like the Talking Heads, and I liked them and Patti Smith and the New York Dolls and Jonathan Richman. I wasn't directly connected with them artistically, but I appreciated their sense of community and the work they were doing.

KS: When you first got here, you were friends with Julian Schnabel and David Salle. Was your work connected to theirs?

JK: I met Julian at the Mudd Club around 1980. He was very supportive. One time he brought me back to my apartment from the Mudd Club and saw my work and told David to see it, and told Mary [Boone] to see it--that was how I was going to have a show at Mary's, even though it didn't happen.

KS: What kind of art interested you most at the time?

JK: I had other friends here in New York who were involved with a different part of the art world. I liked what was going on at John Gibson's gallery. I liked Bill Beckley; I worked at the Museum of Modern Art, and Bill had a show in the Projects gallery. I also liked Bill Lundberg, one of the first projection artists I saw, and James Carpenter and Dennis Oppenheim. It was an exciting gallery. And I always felt a very, very close connection to Martin Kippenberger.

KS: Was there anything that pulled this work together for you, that characterized it?

JK: The work was conceptual, but it represented itself more as "idea" art--it wasn't as dry as classic Conceptual art. The presentation had a certain concise kind of character about it, not necessarily Pop, but very focused.

KS: How did you move from painting into your object-based work?

JK: My father was an interior decorator and had a showroom where things were on display, so I was brought up around objects. When I ultimately lost interest in painting, I enjoyed seeing art that used display, like Robert Smithson's. My own earliest works present themselves as Smithson-type displays.

KS: Were you making a joke about Smithson by using commercial, mass-market objects?

JK: No, I really wasn't being ironic. I just enjoyed the simple abstraction of mirrors and how they brought the viewer into the work. Then I added the kind of readymade that I was attracted to. New York is different now; I don't think there's anything like the way Fourteenth Street used to be. Back then there was a lot of street activity--people would be selling plastic beads and little birds that chirped--and I got involved in finding things I liked. I was losing interest in my paintings, and they were becoming three-dimensional. Finally one day I made a big mound and covered it with artificial leopard skin-I probably saw Mink DeVille and liked Willy DeVille's leopard-skin guitar. Then I put some reflective, shiny, folded metallic fabric in a star shape and mounted a porcelain figure of a woman on it. On a table underneath there was another porcelain figure with an inflatable on either side of it: One was an inflatable panda, and the other was an inflatable elephant. This was 1977.

KS: Your first New York show was in the window of the New Museum in 1980. You called it "The New"--but what was new? Was it the vacuum cleaners? Was there a new sensibility?

JK: The object was new. Before, I had been working with objects and infringing on them--I would bolt or glue them to something. But when I did the New Museum window I was really just displaying the object: If it were a vacuum cleaner hanging in a Plexiglas display box, it would have a hole in its handle, and the only thing I would do was hang it from a hook mounted on the Plexiglas.

KS: That 1980 exhibition was not just your first exposure in New York but your only show for a while. You went home to Sarasota In 1982. When you came back to New York did things get better?

JK: Before I left, there was really no one there for the work. I was supposed to have had that show with Mary Boone, and then I started to work with Annina Nosei a little bit, but that didn't go anywhere either. That's when I went home for a while. I saved up enough money to come back and have a small apartment downtown, and eventually I got a gallery. I had been in a group show in Venezuela earlier ["Art of the Eighties," Galeria Durban, Caracas, 1980], and a young artist there, Meyer Vaisman, saw the show. Meyer got a little older, moved to New York, and opened a gallery on the Lower East Side, International With Monument. And some people who were going to show with him, like Richard Prince, mentioned my work, and Meyer said, "You know Koons? I always liked his work. I saw it in Caracas. How can I see him?" Peter Halley was also at the gallery, so it could've been through Peter too--he had done the "Science Fiction" show [John Weber Gallery, New York, 1983]. I was in a lot of good group shows from 1982 to ' 85.