Funny things happen when people are exposed to outdoor sculptures.
In Richfield, people put costumes on the life-size bronze of a former mayor. On Minneapolis' Minnehaha Parkway, kids clamber up a big bronze bunny. And before three giant bronze bulls lying peacefully on the University of Minnesota's St. Paul campus were anchored to the ground, nighttime pranksters flipped over two of the 1,400-pound beasts.
The newest addition to the Twin Cities' booming public sculpture scene will be dedicated in Edina next month. The 10-foot stainless steel sculpture in Centennial Lakes Park is meant as a metaphor for the continuum of life. But it almost certainly will be known simply as "the big pine cone."
Sculptures are popping up all over in public places in Twin Cities suburbs as well as the central cities. Cities that don't already have them are creating public art committees. With the encouragement of cities, savvy developers are adding sculptures to their projects as a way to soften sometimes forbidding stretches of parking lots.
Advocates for public art say it creates a sense of place and is just plain fun.
"Public art is much less passive than the kind of art you see in a museum," said Jack Becker, executive director of Forecast Public Art in St. Paul and a consultant on public art projects in the region.
"Sculpture ... is like theater," he said. "You move around it, it changes in the light, you're one-on-one with it and it changes with you."
Spreading in Richfield