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Visitors take photos of "Balloon Dog (magenta) 1994-2000", by artist Jeff Koons of the United States, during a retrospective exhibition on Tuesday November 25, 2014, in the Centre Pompidou modern art museum in Paris, France. Paris's Pompidou Center on Tuesday inaugurated the first ever European retrospective on artist Koons. Image Credit: AP

Paris’ Pompidou Center inaugurated a major retrospective Tuesday of American artist Jeff Koons, the polemical 59-year-old master of kitsch, whose huge, stainless-steel balloon dog broke records last year, selling at auction for $58.4 million (Dh214 million).

The exhibit features the porcelain statue of Michael Jackson with his pet monkey, Bubbles, as well as the simplistic inflatable mirrored rabbit that first made Koons’ name in the 1970s and a lewd image with his ex-wife, porn star La Cicciolina.

The show spans 35 years and shows why Koons, America’s highest-selling living artist, is also one of its most controversial. Parts of the exhibit are forbidden to minors.

“Koons’ work, whether we accept it or not, is undoubtedly unique in provoking so much thought and debate,” said the curator of the retrospective, Bernard Blistene.

It comes just months after his retrospective opened at New York’s Whitney Museum for a run that saw two separate attacks on the exhibit by vandals. When Koons was in France in 2008, an installation of 17 sculptures in the Versailles Palace sparked sharp criticism from conservatives for despoiling the iconic site.

The retrospective’s arrival in France is, for Koons, more than a moment of personal pride.

“I owe so much to France from the beginning of my career, from studying French artists, from Manet all the way up to Marcel Duchamps. So to finally get here and see it all being put together at the Pompidou makes me proud,” Koons said.

References to France-based artists pepper the show’s over 100 works, from the Inflatables, his first series, which is thought to be inspired by Duchamps’ groundbreaking “readymade” objects, to his 2003 hanging lobster, an image closely associated with Salvador Dali.

The retrospective runs until April 27.