Sunday, December 27, 2009

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden [Photographs]


Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Spoonbridge and Cherry, 1985-1988. Photos: 16 Miles [more]

Minneapolis's venerable Walker Art Center prohibits photography in its galleries, so images of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, a Walker off-shoot, will have to suffice as an alternative. It opened back in 1988 and features a remarkably well curated selection of work, including a Dan Graham pavilion, a Richard Serra sculpture, Jenny Holzer benches, and a large, glass greenhouse that includes a Mario Merz neon on its roof (reading città irreale or "unreal city," for non-Italian proficient people like me) and a soaring Frank Gehry sculpture of a fish, commissioned by the Walker back in 1986, when the architect's success (particularly in the museum world) was far from assured. The pièce de résistance is, of course, the Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen spoon and cherry, which, after a recent cleaning and repainting, looks as fresh as the day it arrived.


Left: Ellsworth Kelly, Double Curve, 1988; right: Richard Serra, Five Plates, Two Poles, 1971



Frank Gehry, Standing Glass Fish, 1986


Dan Graham, Two-way Mirror Punched Steel Hedge Labyrinth, 1994-1996


Jackie Ferrara, Belvedere, 1988

No comments: