Six-year-old Landon Storm thrust his face into a hole where Mona Lisa's mug would normally be. He smiled big for the photo op, and his dad, Dave Harrison of Coon Rapids, took a picture.
A series of other artists' takes on the Mona Lisa lined the adjacent walls of this stand-alone display at the Minnesota Children's Museum. In Andy Warhol's lithograph print "Two Golden Mona Lisas," Warhol duplicates the famous painting, and in Urbaniec Maciej's "Cyrk; Mona Lisa," Maciej reimagines her as a circus performer, to name a few.
But will the real Mona Lisa please stand up? No, because this display in the broader museum exhibition "Framed: Step Into Art" is all about how artists appropriate famous works of art.
"Did you learn about that painting in school, Landon?" Harrison said.
Landon smiled and nodded, then ran off to ride the larger-than-life chicken inspired by Louisiana folk artist Clementine Hunter's painting "Chicken Hauling Flowers."
Elsewhere, kids gathered around a table in Grant Wood's "Dinner for Threshers," serving each other make-believe meals and pouring "tea" from an empty kettle.
The Minnesota Children's Museum wanted a place where kids could have a chance to touch the art, unlike at traditional art museums where that's forbidden.
"The museum has always been a place where we want adults to be able to say 'Yes,' to their kids," Vice President of External Relations Bob Ingrassia said. "Yes, you can touch. … It's about interacting in a hands-on way, and that's been baked into the DNA of the museum since 1981."