San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PALM SPRINGS SPLIT OVER RETURN OF MONROE SCULPTURE

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Politician­s in Palm Springs view “Forever Marilyn” — a giant sculpture of Marilyn Monroe, with her white skirt blown up above her waist — as a fun, nostalgic tourist attraction. But local cultural leaders are painting it as sexist and sensationa­list, and they are speaking out against the city’s plans to move the sculpture to a site next to the Palm Springs Art Museum.

From 2012 to 2014, the sculpture, by Seward Johnson, presided over downtown Palm Springs. This month, the City Council voted via a Zoom meeting to bring it back, with financing from a local hotel consortium, and place it on Museum Way, the street leading to the museum.

The museum’s director, Louis Grachos, has urged council members to reconsider, calling the sculpture “sexually charged and disrespect­ful” and inappropri­ate for the roughly 80,000 school-age children served yearly by the museum. “When you exit the museum, you are going to see the exposed backside of a 26-foot-tall Marilyn Monroe, including her underwear,” he explained by phone last week. “That’s not the message we want to give to our community.”

The museum’s previous three directors (Elizabeth Armstrong, Steve Nash and Janice Lyle), Modernism Week Chairman William Kopelk and designer Trina Turk have also spoken out against the sculpture’s placement. In a joint op-ed published in The Desert Sun after the council meeting, they warned that the artwork is “blatantly sexist” and “devalues the architectu­ral brand that has been so successful at drawing tourists to Palm Springs.”

Johnson, who died in March, created the Marilyn statue in 2011 after the scene from the 1955 movie “The Seven Year Itch” that shows the actress standing above a subway grate with her pleated white dress flying up. It was first installed in Chicago, where it was widely panned by art critics.

During its stay in Palm Springs, the sculpture gained more of a fan base as a meeting point and photo destinatio­n, with some posing underneath the dress, looking up. And several residents are excited for the return of the artwork, which has since traveled to Bendigo, Australia, and Stamford, Conn.

Residents John Marksbury and Chuck Steinman wrote in a letter to The Desert Sun: “While not a tourism panacea, and no Michelange­lo, ‘Forever Marilyn’ is truly an iconic symbol of the city’s brand. She represents the golden age of Hollywood and the era that put Palm Springs on the map as a chic resort, establishi­ng our city as a midcentury architectu­ral mecca.”

 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A tourist photograph­s the “Forever Marilyn” statue in Palm Springs in 2012.
FREDERIC J. BROWN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A tourist photograph­s the “Forever Marilyn” statue in Palm Springs in 2012.

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