Sun, Moon and One Star by Joan Miró (Wikipedia Photo) |
If you spent two
hours walking around Chicago’s downtown from Millennium Park to Des Plaines
Avenue, you could easily find three dozen sculptural works by world-class
artists, spanning over a century of the city’s history. By just walking down Clark Street you can find In
four blocks alone – between Adams and Randolph –works by Picasso, Chagall,
Miró, Dubuffet, and Calder.
Squeezed between a
government office building on the corner of Dearborn and Washington and the
First United Methodist Church of Chicago just to the west stands Joan Miró’s Moon, Sun and One Star, affectionately known
as Miss Chicago.
According to the
Chicago Public Art website, hosted by the city . . .
The playful poetic images of Joan Miró’s art
comprise a private mythology derived from the artist’s memories of his homeland
in Catalonia, Spain. Using his unique visual symbolism, Miró imbued this
sculpture with the mystical presence of an earth deity, both cosmic and
worldly. Shapes and forms found in this composition evoke celestial imagery and
common objects. The bell-shaped base draws the viewer’s gaze downward,
symbolizing Miró’s association of the female form with the earth. The sphere
above represents the moon while the shape of the face is like a ceramic hook.
The fork projecting from the top of the head is symbolic of a star, with
individual tines representing rays of light.
The sculpture of
steel, wire mesh, concrete, bronze and ceramic tile was originally proposed in
1967, but with all heck breaking lose in city streets as 1967 turned into 1968,
the city found it could not afford the moon, the sun, not even one star. In the next two years Miró cast eight
5-and-a-quarter inch maquettes, one of which is today in the Milwaukee Museum
of Art.
Over a decade later
Mayor Jane Byrne (The people ask much,
often more than any government can give. We must resist the temptation to
promise solutions to all problems.) found a quarter-million dollars which
was matched by private contributions to go ahead with the sculpture. On April
20, 1981 the sculpture was unveiled.
The next day the
art critic for The Chicago Tribune,
Alan G. Artner (good name for an art critic, yes?), called Chicago’s
acquisition, “An inflated charm-bracelet bauble that imperfectly echoes an
earlier painting and some ceramics. A
doll that lacks the textural appeal of a small-scale version in bronze. A softheaded caricature that diminished the
reputation it was intended to honor.
Everything about it is second rate, from the ceramic adornments that
give the sculpture its real title . . .
to the bronze comb atop the concrete lady’s head. There is no magic, mystery, or invention. The thing is moribund. It is a monumental mistake.”
Ouch.
Less than two weeks
after the work was unveiled a 24-year-old machinist, Crister Nyholm, put Mr. Artner’s words into
action when at 4:50 p.m. he threw an orange juice container filled with red
paint at the sculpture. It didn’t reach
the stars, but it splattered onto the sculpture about halfway up the piece and
dripped almost to the pavement. “I just
don’t like the statue,” Mr. Nyholm told police.
Miss Chicago –
she’s easy to miss, shoe-horned in a little “plaza” between church and state, the great Picasso piece smirking at her little cousin huddling in the
shadows across the street. These days
it’s even tougher to see the Miró piece as it stands under a shelter of
scaffolding and mesh while sun, moon and star get a facelift.
Cryster Nyholm's Dream (JWB Photo) |
2 comments:
Why did the man do that and was he arrested?
The sculpture looks stunning I wonder how they got the red paint off. Can you tell me more about that?
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