The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden is one of Minnesota's crown jewels
and its centerpiece, the Spoonbridge and Cherry, has become a Minnesota
icon. Claes Oldenburg best known for his ingenious, oversized
renditions of ordinary objects, and Coosje van Bruggen, his wife and
collaborator, had already created a number of large-scale public sculptures, including the Batcolumn in Chicago, when they were asked to design a fountain-sculpture for the planned Minneapolis Sculpture
Garden. The spoon had appeared as a motif in a number of Oldenburg's
drawings and plans over the years, inspired by a novelty item (a spoon
resting on a glob of fake chocolate) he had acquired in 1962. Eventually
the utensil emerged--in humorously gigantic scale--as the theme of the
Minneapolis project. Van Bruggen contributed the cherry as a playful
reference to the Garden's formal geometry, which reminded her of
Versailles and the exaggerated dining etiquette Louis XIV imposed there.
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