Minneapolis Sculpture Garden | Walker Art Center
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Explore more than 60 sculptures from the Walker’s collection on 11 scenic acres in the heart of Minneapolis. The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden is free, open to the public, and is open from 6 am to 12 midnight every day

Spoonbridge sculpture in garden, a spoon with a cherry on it

Visit the Garden

Help the Walker maintain and preserve the sculptures you have come to know and love with a 100% tax-deductible gift to the Garden fund today! Give now.

Newest Additions

Explore two new works in the Garden: Okciyapi (2021), a commission by Twin Cities–based artist Angela Two Stars; and Adam and Eve (2021) by Simone Fattal.

The Land You’re Standing On

This parkland has seen many changes over time. A landscape shaped by glaciers more than 10,000 years ago, the area was once an expanse of marshland used as a seasonal camp by Minnesota’s first people, the Dakota and the Ojibwe. In the late 1800s, the site held an armory and parade grounds. In the early 1900s, formal gardens and a series of sports fields were established by the Park Board. When the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden opened in 1988, it was one of the first major public/private urban sculpture parks of its kind in the United States.

The Nature of Art

The Minneapolis Sculpture Garden is home to more than 60 outdoor sculptures. Generations of artists from 10 different countries around the world created these artworks. Many of the works are site-specific and made especially for this public park—from the iconic Spoonbridge and Cherry centerpiece to structures that offer spaces for gathering, conversation, or dreaming. Rediscover the Garden’s art and natural beauty through Minnesota’s ever-changing seasons.   

It Takes a Village

What happens when experts from many fields—architects, curators, designers, artists, landscape architects, gardeners, environmentalists, writers, scientists, and many others—come together with community members to reimagine a beloved public space? The result of this multifaceted partnership is a forward-thinking design for the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, which was fully reconstructed in 2017. The site features ecologically sustainable water management, a flourishing habitat for plants and wildlife, and creative landscape elements that showcase the artworks in nature. Learn more about how the Garden came to be.

The Fresh Meadow

Improving the park’s sustainability, a fresh meadow filled with native plants and engineered soils helps absorb runoff from stormwater, returning the landscape to a more natural state. This environment is interspersed with three “islands” that showcase contemporary sculptures from the Walker Art Center’s collection.

Saving Water

At the center of the park is an underground cistern, or water collection tank, near the Spoonbridge and Cherry. This feature helps to water the garden and nearby ball fields and also keeps more than 4 million gallons of runoff out of the storm sewers each year, thus reducing pollution in the Mississippi River basin.

Flora & Fauna

Throughout the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, more than 300 native trees, shrubs, perennial plants, and grasses not only create a natural frame for the art but also offer a thriving habitat for birds, butterflies, and other creatures. This dynamic ecosystem supports the long-term stability of the site, one of the crown jewels of the city’s park system.

Special Events & Photography

To rent spaces in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, visit minneapolisparks.org or call 612-230-6400. Professional photography is welcome with an advance permit from the Park Board.

Explore the Garden

Hand for Minneapolis
Magic
Okciyapi
Privileged Points
Eliza Winston from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Time from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Harriet Robinson Scott from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Kirk Washington, Jr. from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Maḣpiya Wic̣aṡṭa (Cloud Man) from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Siah Armajani from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Untitled (Child) from the series Shadows at the Crossroads
Hahn/Cock
Spoonbridge and Cherry
Black Vessel for a Saint
September Room (Room with Two Reclining Figures and Composition with Long Verticals)
Untitled (gate)
Gog & Magog (Ampersand)
Garden Seating, Reading, Thinking
Seat-Leg Table
Octopus
Tombstone for Phùng Vo from All your deeds shall in water be writ, but this in marble
X
Arcs from four corners, with alternating bands of white and brown stone. The floor is bordered and divided horizontally and vertically by a black stone band
Three x Four x Three
Salute to Painting
Geometric Mouse - Scale A
Bog Walker
Sky Pesher, 2005
Sitzwuste
Hare on Bell on Portland Stone Piers
For Whom ...
Dawn Tree
After Dream
Arikidea
X with Columns
Sagacious Head 6 and Sagacious Head 7
Shodo Shima Stone Study
LOVE
Untitled
Woodrow
The Six Crystals
The Spinner
Flatpak in the Garden
Double Curve
Five Plates, Two Poles
Amaryllis
Empire
Reclining Mother and Child
Without Words
Walking Man
Bronze Woman IV Bronze Woman IV
Untitled
Untitled
Level Head
Concetto Spaziale “Natura” (Spatial Concept “Nature”)
September Room (Room with Two Reclining Figures and Composition with Long Verticals)
Two-way Mirror Punched Steel Hedge Labyrinth
Hephaestus
La soledad
Irene Hixon Whitney Bridge
Selections from The Living Series
Alene Grossman Memorial Arbor and Flower Garden
Cowles Pavilion and Regis Promenade
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