Albuquerque Journal

A doggone shame

Thieves kidnap bronze dog from city museum

- BY ELISE KAPLAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

For more than a decade, a bronze dog nicknamed “Sparky” proved he could sit and stay in the Albuquerqu­e Museum of Art and History sculpture garden. But, on Wednesday afternoon, a museum employee discovered that Sparky had left his owner’s side.

The metallic canine weighs close to 100 pounds and accompanie­d a man sitting on a bench as one part of an installati­on called “Park Place” by famed sculptor Glenna Goodacre, said Andrew Connors, the museum’s curator of art. Kids and employees began calling the dog “Sparky” after it was installed, he said.

Connors said it looks like someone sawed through a bolt that attached the dog to concrete buried in the ground.

“It took a lot of effort or just brute force,” Connors

said.

Police are investigat­ing the theft, but a spokesman for the department said they don’t have any leads.

Connors said the museum near Old Town acquired the piece in 1999 and installed it in the sculpture garden in 2004, where it represents people at leisure, including a man sitting on a bench, accompanie­d by his dog.

Connors said he could remember one other attempted theft of a statue a couple of years ago, but otherwise the museum has never had a problem.

He said he hopes the theft was a prank and the statue will be returned rather than melted down for scrap value.

“The Albuquerqu­e museum wants to provide wonderful cultural amenities, and create a terrific environmen­t for enjoyment, thought and contemplat­ion,” Connors said. “When someone destroys that, it basically means one person has decided that the rest of the community won’t get to appreciate this work of art.”

If the dog is not returned, Connors said the museum will have to purchase a new one for the installati­on — at a cost of thousands of dollars.

“We absolutely will replace it if it can’t be found,” he said. “We want to make sure the sculpture is full and complete in the way the artist intended it.”

Connors said the dog’s disappeara­nce has affected more than just the museum staff and garden aesthetic. He said Friday morning he met a couple that told him they like to walk their dog through the sculpture garden every day.

“They were horrified to see the dog was gone because they always like to have their dog visit with the sculpture dog,” Connors said. “It’s sad to see that anyone would do anything that would negatively affect the community.”

 ?? MARLA BROSE/ JOURNAL ?? A television videograph­er films the spot where a bronze dog was stolen from outside the Albuquerqu­e Museum of Art and History. The dog, which was discovered to be missing on Wednesday, is part of a outdoor sculpture by Glenna Goodacre.
MARLA BROSE/ JOURNAL A television videograph­er films the spot where a bronze dog was stolen from outside the Albuquerqu­e Museum of Art and History. The dog, which was discovered to be missing on Wednesday, is part of a outdoor sculpture by Glenna Goodacre.
 ?? COURTESY OF ALBUQUERQU­E MUSEUM ?? The bronze dog in the “Park Place” installati­on is seen in an earlier photo supplied by the museum.
COURTESY OF ALBUQUERQU­E MUSEUM The bronze dog in the “Park Place” installati­on is seen in an earlier photo supplied by the museum.

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