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More about the Objects on View To learn even more about the objects on view, see Explore & Learn for an interactive feature specially designed to complement the exhibition.
More about Claes Oldenburg
Oldenburg went on to make giant soft sculptures, including a fifteen-foot-long ice-cream cone and a bed-size hamburger, and recreated manufactured objects, such as a light switch or a toilet, in two versions: one hard (made of cardboard or wood) and one soft (made of kapok-filled vinyl or canvas). In the mid-1960s he embarked on what he calls Proposed Colossal Monuments, renderings of startling modifications of familiar locations exquisitely drawn in crayon and watercolor. In Proposed Colossal Monument for Park Avenue, New York: Good Humor Bar (1965), for example, a melting ice-cream bar is substituted for the MetLife Building. A bite out of the bar allows traffic to pass.
From drawings of fantastic monuments Oldenburg moved on to actual or "feasible" monuments. The first, The Lipstick (Ascending) on Caterpillar Tracks (1969, restored 1974), was a twenty-four-foot-tall steel, aluminum, and resin lipstick mounted on a platform on tank treads. It was commissioned by students at the Yale School of Architecture. Intended as a podium for speeches on issues of the day, it was installed in Yale's Beinecke Plaza in front of a Neoclassical building inscribed with the names of World War I battle sites.
In 1976 the forty-five-foot-tall Clothespin was placed in central Philadelphia. Later that year Oldenburg joined forces with Coosje van Bruggen on the reconstruction and resiting of the forty-one-foot-tall Trowel I (197176) on the grounds of the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo. Thus began their collaboration on what van Bruggen was to call Large-Scale Projects, commissioned works permanently placed and emblematic of their site. To date, forty such projects have been realized in the United States, Europe, and Japan, among them Batcolumn (1977) for Chicago, Spoonbridge and Cherry (1988) for Minneapolis, Bicyclette Ensevelie (Buried Bicycle) (1990) for Paris, Saw, Sawing (1996) for Tokyo, and Ago, Filo e Nodo (Needle, Thread and Knot) (2000) for Milan.
More about Coosje van Bruggen
Van Bruggen has written about Oldenburg's early work as well as on the artists Gerhard Richter, Bruce Nauman, John Baldessari, and Hanne Darboven and the architect Frank O. Gehry. In 1985 she created the characters for II Corso del Coltello (The Course of the Knife), a legendary outdoor performance in Venice, Italy, done with Oldenburg and Gehry.
Van Bruggen became an American citizen in 1993. She and Oldenburg live and work in lower Manhattan, in California, and on a centuries-old estate in the Loire Valley, where the presence of nature and another culture (the region was home to such literary figures as Rabelais, Balzac, de Tocqueville, George Sand, and Proust) has affected their recent workfor example, the park and garden sculptures placed on the roof.
More about Artists as a Team
The artistic team has to date executed more than forty sculptures in architectural scale, which have been inserted into various urban surroundings in Europe, Asia, and the United States. These include: Batcolumn, 1977, Harold Washington Social Security Center, 600 West Madison Street, Chicago; Flashlight, 1981, University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Stake Hitch, 1984, Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas; Spoonbridge and Cherry, 1988, Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Bicyclette Ensevelie (Buried Bicycle), 1990, Parc de la Villette, Paris; Binoculars (with Frank O. Gehry), 1991, 340 Main Street, Venice, California; Free Stamp, 1991, Willard Park, Cleveland, Ohio; Mistos (Match Cover), 1992, Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona; Inverted Collar and Tie, 1994, Mainzer Landstrasse, Frankfurt am Main, Germany; Saw, Sawing, 1996, Tokyo International Exhibition Center, Big Sight, Tokyo; Ago, Filo e Nodo (Needle, Thread and Knot), 2000, Piazzale Cadorna, Milan; Flying Pins, 2000, Eindhoven, the Netherlands; and Dropped Cone, 2001, Neumarkt Galerie, Köln, Germany. Oldenburg and van Bruggen are currently creating large-scale projects for San Francisco (Cupid's Span) and Denver, Colorado (The Big Sweep).
Brochure and Educational Programs
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