It stood for 42 years, and then it was gone.
There is no longer an abstract triangular sculpture on the plaza of the Wells Fargo Operations Center at 255 2nd Av. S. in Minneapolis.
Ring any bells? Did you notice it was gone? Did anyone? What happened?
Dubbed "Inner Search," the sculpture looked a lot like the Great Seal on the back of the dollar bill. You know, that truncated pyramid with an eye a top it.
When it was unveiled in 1980, the sculpture had champions and, of course, a few critics.
Columnist and tireless Minneapolis booster Barbara Flanagan previewed the installation by recalling the career of its creator, Mark di Suvero, noting that New York magazine had called him "an artist-hero in the noble lineage of Caravaggio and Courbet." She predicted that the installation would be "the best show downtown this season."
In another column, Flanagan wondered about the name of the piece and its inspiration, writing: "No one, not even di Suvero's friend Martin Friedman, director of Walker Art Center, knows the name of the sculpture or its inspiration. When Friedman asked, di Suvero told him to examine the dollar bill."
A Minneapolis Tribune editorial was thrilled with the installation: