Renowned Creator of Funky Urban Sculptures Dies

Claes Oldenburg was 93
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jul 18, 2022 2:48 PM CDT
Renowned Creator of Funky Urban Sculptures Dies
Pop artist Claes Oldenburg poses for a photograph at his home in New York in 1986.   (AP Photo/David Bookstaver, File)

Pop artist Claes Oldenburg, who turned the mundane into the monumental through his outsized sculptures of a baseball bat, a clothespin, and other objects, has died at age 93. Oldenburg died Monday morning in Manhattan, according to his daughter, Maartje Oldenburg. He had been in poor health since falling and breaking his hip a month ago. The Swedish-born Oldenburg drew on the sculptor’s eternal interest in form, the dadaist’s breakthrough notion of bringing readymade objects into the realm of art, and the pop artist’s ironic, outlaw fascination with lowbrow culture—by reimagining ordinary items in fantastic contexts, the AP reports.

“I want your senses to become very keen to their surroundings,” he told the Los Angeles Times in 1963. “When I am served a plate of food, I see shapes and forms, and I sometimes don’t know whether to eat the food or look at it,” he said. In May 2009, a 1976 Oldenburg sculpture, "Typewriter Eraser," sold for a record $2.2 million at an auction of post-war and contemporary art in New York. Among his most famous large sculptures are “Clothespin,” a 45-foot steel clothespin installed near Philadelphia’s City Hall in 1976, and “Batcolumn,” a 100-foot lattice-work steel baseball bat installed the following year in front of a federal office building in Chicago.

The placement of those sculptures showed how his monument-sized items—though still provoking much controversy—took their place in front of public and corporate buildings as the establishment ironically championed the once-outsider art. Many of Oldenburg’s later works were produced in collaboration with his second wife, Coosje van Bruggen, a Dutch-born art historian, artist, and critic whom he married in 1977. The previous year, she had helped him install his 41-foot “Trowel I” on the grounds of the Kroller-Muller Museum in Otterlo, the Netherlands.

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One of his early large-scale works was “Lipstick (Ascending) on Caterpillar Tracks,” which juxtaposed a large lipstick on tracks resembling those that propel Army tanks. The original—with its undertone suggestion to “make love (lipstick) not war (tanks)”—was commissioned by students and faculty and installed at Yale University in 1969. Oldenburg’s 45-foot steel “Clothespin” was installed in 1976 outside Philadelphia’s City Hall. It evokes Constantin Brancusi’s 1908 “The Kiss,” a semi-abstract depiction of a nearly identical man and woman embracing eyeball to eyeball. “Clothespin” resembles the ordinary household object, but its two halves face each other in the same way as Brancusi’s lovers.

(More sculptor stories.)

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