Untitled (Your body is a battleground)
Barbara Kruger
1989

Jeff Koons's Rabbit is one of the most iconic and provocative works of late twentieth-century art. Created in 1986 as part of his "Statuary" series, the sculpture is a cast stainless steel reproduction of an inflatable toy rabbit, its mirror-polished surface reflecting the viewer and surrounding environment. By elevating a cheap, mass-produced object into a gleaming monument, Koons collapses the boundary between high art and consumer culture, channeling the legacy of Marcel Duchamp's readymades while injecting a distinctly American Pop sensibility.
The work exists as an edition of three plus one artist's proof, with copies held by the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, The Broad in Los Angeles, and the National Museum of Qatar. In May 2019, one edition sold at Christie's New York for $91.1 million, briefly making it the most expensive work by a living artist ever sold at auction. Rabbit endures as a touchstone of postmodern sculpture — simultaneously playful and unsettling, seductive and hollow, a perfect mirror that reflects our own desires back at us.