30 Rockefeller Plaza
49th St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Extended through July 5, free
www.rockefellercenter.com
seated ballerina slideshow
www.artproductionfund.org
In 2000, controversial American artist Jeff Koons placed “Puppy,” a forty-three-foot-high stainless-steel sculpture of a dog covered in tens of thousands of flowering plants, in the plaza at Rockefeller Center, a work that Koons called a symbol of “love, warmth, and happiness.” In 2014, he installed at the same spot the thirty-seven-foot-high stainless-steel “Split-Rocker,” part toy pony, part dinosaur, also covered in flowering plants. And now Koons, who also had a major retrospective at the Whitney in 2014, has brought “Seated Ballerina” to Rockefeller Plaza, a forty-five-foot-high inflatable tchotchke that would feel at home in the Thanksgiving Day Parade. Inspired by a smaller piece from his “Antiquity” series, the sculpture, which recalls his balloon dogs and is sponsored by the Art Production Fund and Kiehl’s, is based on a porcelain figure by Oksana Zhnikrup, who created statuettes for the Kiev Experimental Ceramic-Art Factory beginning in 1955. Koons’s nylon ballerina, which is supposed to reference a modern-day Venus while also raising awareness for the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children, is sitting on a tuffet, leaning over to her left and adjusting one of her ballet slippers. In the wind, she slowly rocks back and forth, her left arm in motion, strings holding her in place. (On days with severe weather she is deflated, only to rise up again on balmier times in shining gold, silver, red, and blue.) Although the signs say she will remain in Rockefeller Center through June 5, her stay has been extended until July 5, so there’s still time to catch her. As with so much of Koons’s oeuvre, what you see is pretty much what you get; some people love it, some hate it; some find it plagiaristic art lacking originality, while others consider it an entertaining bit of artistic appropriation, one of the foundations of Koons’s practice. In any case, it certainly attracts attention, both up close as well as from a distance, where “Seated Ballerina” hovers over Paul Manship’s monumental sculpture of Prometheus in the light-up fountain below. “I hope the installation of ‘Seated Ballerina’ at Rockefeller Center offers a sense of affirmation and excitement to the viewer to reach their potential,” Koons said in a statement. “The aspect of reflectivity emulates life’s energy; it’s about contemplation and what it means to be a human being. It’s a very hopeful piece.”