Musical Instruments
In a group of works from 1992 based on musical instruments, Oldenburg returnedto subject matter he had explored in the 1960s.
Giant Soft Drum Set, 1967.
Vinyl and canvas filled with expanded polystyrene chips,
metal and painted wood parts;
and wood-and-Formica base with metal railing;
nine instruments, 48 x 72 x 84 inches (121.9 x 182.9 x 253.4 cm) overall.
Collection of Kimiko and John Powers.
His earlier Giant Soft Drum Set (1967), with its many parts constructed of vinyl, wood, and canvas, is amonghis most complex soft sculptures. The artist once owned a set of traps and wasinspired to make a drum-set sculpture after experiencing the shapes and soundsof thunderheads over a dramatic Colorado landscape. He also made a white"ghost" version of Giant Soft Drum Set, a number of related drawings, and aproposal for a colossal monument in London's Battersea Park.
In the recent works, Oldenburg used the subject of saxophones, harps, andclarinets, whose precise forms serve as foils for sculptural statements aboutdefunctionalization and decomposition.
"Drum Set is an unmade bed . . . all gravity. It is a state of nature, acondition, that I want to represent above all--the large formal realm ofsoftness, which one's own body suggests."--Oldenburg, 1971
Soft Saxophone, Scale A, Muslin, 1992.
Muslin, cloth, muslin, urethane, wood and dacron, painted with latex
11-1/4 x 27 x 49 inches (28.6 x 68.6 x 124.5 cm.)
Collection of Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, New York.
Like the drum set, Oldenburg's softsaxophone alludes to the human figure, as in the yellow Soft Saxophone, ScaleA, Muslin, which lies prone on its pedestal, or the large, white SoftSaxophone, Scale B, which sits gracefully upright.
"A life cycle can be imposed on an object. An object can be very energetic andactive, and then it has a dying phase and a phase of decomposition."
--Oldenburg, 1992