The fountains in Lyndel King's backyard include a theatrically animated pair of sculpted crows. The water flowing down their beaks makes their bottom mandibles rise and fall so the copper-toned creatures seem like long-lost friends catching up, with water for words.
For King, often described as "the grandmother of the Twin Cities arts scene," "art is about story — we can find ourselves in art," she said. Oh, the stories her art collection could tell about her travels, her dreams and her home.
A chemist turned stylemaker and arts scene visionary, King has led a life of passion and intensity. She focused her knowledge and energy into building the Weisman Art Museum, where she held the reins for 40 years, retiring last summer and leaving it as the highly rated institution it is today. In the process, she became a pioneer and role model — a daring female institution builder.
When she took the helm of what was then called the University Gallery in 1981, it was located in an upstairs, hard-to-access space in the warrens of Northrop Auditorium, with operating hours that matched Northrop events. She and her team worked with starchitect Frank Gehry to find a space to build a new museum on the University of Minnesota's Minneapolis campus.
"Frank Gehry's design for the Weisman not only brought world-famous architecture to the Twin Cities landscape, it turned the university campus to face the Mississippi River," said Linda Mack, author and retired Star Tribune architecture critic.
King's home, chock-full of sculptures, paintings, pottery, figurines, photos and other artistic output, is a testament to her career, curiosity and style even if it's not housed in an eye-catching building like the Weisman. In fact, the 1915 Minneapolis Craftsman where she and her husband, Blaine, have lived for nearly 50 years is studiedly unassuming from the outside. Inside, she has more art in one bathroom than most people have in their entire homes.
Come fly with me
And you can travel the world as she has done in just a few feet in her five-bedroom, four-bath home, which is quiet except for opera playing on a stereo and the skittering of her dogs, Angel and Phryne. The front room, teeming with art like all the others, is painted the same red as frescoes in the Villa of the Mysteries in Pompeii.
Behind that is a room adorned with William Morris wallpaper from 19th-century London. In the back, where King bumped out the house to make room for more art, sits a gallery with quilts, religious figurines and bone figures from the American Southwest.