Out of a subway
entrance in Center City, between the two office towers of
Centre Square, rises a gigantic clothespin. Facing City Hall
tower with its venerable sculpture of William Penn,
Clothespin has the jolting and humorous effect of
a familiar object seen out of context. This witty monument
was commissioned by developer Jack Wolgin as part of the Redevelopment
Authority’s 1% program.
Oldenburg has been noted for his attempts to democratize
art, and Clothespin certainly draws a reaction from
everyone who passes it. After the installation in 1976, cab
drivers, pedestrians, art enthusiasts, and local office workers
admired it or joked about it, and it soon became a Philadelphia
landmark. But the sculpture's resemblance to a daily object
should not obscure its artistic qualities. It is not, in fact,
a reproduction of an ordinary clothespin, but a sweeping,
stylized version. Art critics have written of its "soaring"
look and the "velvety" texture of the Corten steel,
which turns a warm reddish-brown as it weathers. The sculpture
invites many interpretations, and Oldenburg himself compared
the form to Constantin Brancusi’s famous sculpture The
Kiss in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Like Brancusi’s
work, Clothespin presents two separate forms merging
in an embrace.
Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny
Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
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