A giant pair of blue eyes rose over Grand Avenue Sunday in St. Paul, peering out of gold-colored spectacles onto one of the city's most popular shopping and dining corridors.
Spelled out beneath the spectral eyes are the words: "Doctor T.J. Eckleburg. Oculist."
The 500-pound, 9-foot-tall and 17-foot-long steel sign stopped some pedestrians in their tracks. One woman asked: "Is he fictional?"
Tom Mischke beamed. It was exactly the "what-on-earth?" reaction he spent 20 years trying to bring to St. Paul to honor author F. Scott Fitzgerald and his best-known novel.
"What would make you open 'The Great Gatsby' more?" Mischke later asked. "A statue of him? Or a weird sign from the book?"
The piece of public art replicates a billboard mentioned several times in Fitzgerald's novel. The eyes often are interpreted as emblematic of God peering down and perhaps passing judgment.
Its origin story started with Mischke, a local writer, musician and radio host who was trying to persuade his friend, David Ulrich, to open a business on Grand Avenue and install a Fitzgerald tribute. But Ulrich, owner of the Spectacle Shoppe, had locations in Minneapolis and elsewhere.
"I didn't think I needed it," Ulrich said of a St. Paul location.