Ottawa Citizen

Neon bunny hops off to Dallas

Playboy logo statue moving to museum

- TERRY WALLACE

DALLAS A 40-foot-high Playboy bunny logo that had upset some West Texas residents will be removed from its roadside display and hauled to a Dallas museum.

The neon bunny — part of the Playboy Marfa sculpture by New York contempora­ry artist Richard Phillips — will be dismantled this month and taken from highway U.S. 90 to the Dallas Contempora­ry museum, about 800 kilometres northeast.

The bunny will be displayed in April as part of an exhibition highlighti­ng Phillips’s work, said museum spokeswoma­n Erin Cluley.

The museum does not keep its art as part of any collection, so the neon bunny will be moved again — it’s just not clear where, Cluley said.

Peter Doroshenko, executive director of the museum, said Dallas Contempora­ry has been working with Phillips for a year on his first museum exhibition in the U.S.

He said the Playboy piece will be one of several three-dimensiona­l works along with paintings and drawings.

The Playboy Marfa sculpture debuted last June in Marfa. Some Marfa residents were upset that their town — known as a hub for artists and creative types — was being used for marketing purposes.

Also, Texas transporta­tion officials said the sculpture lacked a state permit required for outdoor billboards and gave Playboy 45 days to remove it.

“We are happy this has been resolved and that Texans will still get to enjoy this piece of art,” said Veronica Beyer, spokeswoma­n for the Texas Department of Transporta­tion.

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