Screw Arch
The Sculpture
Claes Oldenburg’s Screw Arch is in fact a design
for a bridge. The idea for the bridge came about during the plans for a
new Willemsbrug over the River Maas in Rotterdam. In 1978 the director
of Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Wim Beeren, invited Oldenburg to make a
model, an etching and a sculpture based on this idea. The Screw Arch
project was completed in New York in 1982. In October of that year the
colossal sculpture – produced in three sections – arrived by ship in
Rotterdam together with seventeen working drawings, a model, three
etchings and various photographs and other forms of documentation. The
items were exhibited at the museum in the summer of 1983.
The Screw Arch consists of an arched aluminium screw
approximately four metres high and seven metres long. The screw is
arched as if it has collapsed under its own weight, but it remains
recognisable as a screw. The tension of the arched form and its lifelike
enlargement give the object an architectural yet playful quality.
It was initially the plan to exhibit the sculpture with its accompanying
model and etchings for several months per year in Museum Boijmans Van
Beuningen. The sculpture’s scale is related to the dimensions of the
galleries in the Bodon wing. But when the sculpture arrived in Rotterdam
it seemed more suitable to give it a permanent place in the museum’s
sculpture garden. Oldenburg chose a site above the water, on a bank
between the ponds, to remind viewers that the sculpture was originally
intended to be a bridge. The sculpture is mirrored in the water; the
sculpture and its reflection form a circle.
Specifications
| nicknames | Schroefboog |
| date construction | 1982 |
| location since | Museum Garden Boijmans Van Beuningen |
| trend | Pop Art |
| dimensions sculpture (hxwxl) in cm | 386 x 240 x 655 |
| material | Aluminium |



