Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There are at least two small-scale models of the sculpture. The first normally stays in the Oldenburg gallery at the Denver Art Museum: Clothespin – 4 Foot Version, completed in 1974. [8] The second, a 10-foot version completed in 1975, is located and occasionally displayed in the Contemporary Art department of the Art Institute of Chicago. [9]
National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C., U.S. Seattle Art Museum Olympic Sculpture Park CityCenter, Paradise, Nevada: Lion's Tail: Stainless steel, aluminum, wood, fiber-reinforced plastic, expanded polystyrene, painted with urethane enamel; nylon 18 ft. 6 in. × 15 ft. × 4 ft. (5.6 × 4.6 × 1.2 m) 1999
There is a 5-foot clothespin granite grave marker in the Middlesex cemetery, Vermont, marking the grave of Jack Crowell, the last owner of the National Clothespin Company, which was the last clothespin manufacturer in the United States. He originally requested that it include a working spring be included so children could play on it, but the ...
Claes Oldenburg was born on January 28, 1929, in Stockholm, [3] the son of Gösta Oldenburg [4] and his wife Sigrid Elisabeth née Lindforss. [5] His father was then a Swedish diplomat stationed in New York and in 1936 was appointed consul general of Sweden to Chicago where Oldenburg grew up, attending the Latin School of Chicago.
In 2001, Eric Dregni wrote that the sculpture had "become the unofficial symbol of Minneapolis" and in 2008, City Pages described it as "one of the Twin Cities' most iconic images." [ 15 ] [ 16 ] The Walker reported receiving more requests for images of Spoonbridge and Cherry than any other work in its collections.
National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo 83.5 x 85 More images: Balzac in the Robe of a Dominican Monk: 1892 Bronze Museo Soumaya, Mexico City 106.4 × 38.5 × 50.8 More images: Monument to Balzac: 1892 to 1897 Bronze Musée Rodin 270 x 120.5 More images: Youth Triumphant: 1894 Bronze Portland Museum of Art 52.1 More images ...
Prone sculpture: Alabaster: 61 x 223.5 x 81cm [203] More images: Sally Ryan: The New Art Gallery Walsall: 1937 Bust: Bronze: 39cm Two casts [1] [3] [204] Pola Nerenska: Memphis Brooks Museum of Art: 1937 Head: Bronze: 38cm Five casts, plaster National Gallery of Victoria [1] More images: Second Portrait of Jackie with Curls: The New Art Gallery ...
The National Clothespin Factory is a historic industrial building at One Granite Street in Montpelier, Vermont. Built in 1918, it is a significant local example of an early 20th-century wood-frame factory, and was home to the nation's last manufacturer of wooden clothespins .