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Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen — Shuttlecocks

Shuttlecocks

1994

Four colossal white badminton shuttlecocks, rendered in painted aluminum and fiberglass, stand planted in the lawn before the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art as monumental testaments to playfulness and scale. Created by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, this 1994 installation transforms an everyday sporting object into a towering public sculpture, each shuttlecock reaching dramatically skyward against the Kansas City sky. The work exemplifies pop art's embrace of humble, mass-produced forms elevated to monumental proportions; the pristine white feathered forms cast sharp shadows across the manicured grounds, creating an arresting dialogue between the graceful and the absurd. Positioned at the threshold between art institution and public space, the Shuttlecocks invite viewers to reconsider the ordinary and to experience wonder in unexpected places. This iconic installation has become synonymous with the museum and the city itself, a beloved landmark that celebrates both artistic ambition and communal joy. Photo by Carol M. Highsmith — Library of Congress (public domain)

Medium
Painted aluminum and fiberglass

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Spotted works by Claes Oldenburg

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Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen, Shuttlecocks, 1994

Four colossal white badminton shuttlecocks, rendered in painted aluminum and fiberglass, stand planted in the lawn before the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art as monumental testaments to playfulness and scale. Created by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, this 1994 installation transforms an everyday sporting object into a towering public sculpture, each shuttlecock reaching dramatically skyward against the Kansas City sky. The work exemplifies pop art's embrace of humble, mass-produced forms elevated to monumental proportions; the pristine white feathered forms cast sharp shadows across the manicured grounds, creating an arresting dialogue between the graceful and the absurd. Positioned at the threshold between art institution and public space, the Shuttlecocks invite viewers to reconsider the ordinary and to experience wonder in unexpected places. This iconic installation has become synonymous with the museum and the city itself, a beloved landmark that celebrates both artistic ambition and communal joy. Photo by Carol M. Highsmith — Library of Congress (public domain)

Medium
Painted aluminum and fiberglass
Year
1994
Seen at
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

Related themes

Figurative Sculpture, Aluminum, Twentieth Century, Modern Sculpture, Public Landmark, White Sculpture, Monumental Scale, Public Art, Whimsical Art, Fiberglass, Kansas City, Pop Art, Playful Art, Surrealist Influence, Contemporary Art, American Art, Iconic Landmark, Museum Installation, Large Scale, Outdoor Sculpture

More works by Claes Oldenburg

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago