Googly eyes on Oregon city sculptures cause officials to be on the lookout

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Googly eyes have been appearing on sculptures around the central Oregon city of Bend, delighting many residents and sparking a viral sensation covered widely by news outlets and featured on a popular late-night talk show.

On social media, the city shared photos of googly eyes on installations in the middles of roundabouts that make up its so-called Roundabout Art Route. One photo shows googly eyes placed on a sculpture of two deer, while another shows them attached to a sphere. It’s not yet known who has been putting them on the sculptures.

“While the googly eyes placed on the various art pieces around town might give you a chuckle, it costs money to remove them with care to not damage the art,” the city said in its posts.

The Facebook post received hundreds of comments, with many users saying they liked the googly eyes. “My daughter and I went past the flaming chicken today and shared the biggest laugh,” one user said, using a nickname for the Phoenix Rising sculpture. “We love the googly eyes. This town is getting to be so stuffy. Let’s have fun!”

A set of googly eyes placed on a sculpture of deer.
Googly eyes on a sculpture of deer. Photograph: AP

Another Facebook user wrote: “I think the googly eyes on the deer specifically are a great look, and they should stay that way.”

Others said the city should focus on addressing more important issues, such as homelessness, instead of spending time and money on removing the googly eyes.

Over the years, the city’s sculptures have been adorned with other seasonal decorations, including Santa hats, wreaths and leis. The city doesn’t remove those, and views the googly eyes differently because of the adhesive, Bend’s communications director, Rene Mitchell, told the Associated Press.

“We really encourage our community to engage with the art and have fun. We just need to make sure that we can protect it and that it doesn’t get damaged,” she said.

The post and its comments were covered by news outlets, and even made it on to a segment of CBS’s The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The city regrets that its post was misunderstood, Mitchell said.

Cardboard and tape
Residue following the removal of a pair of googly eyes that had been placed on a public art sculpture in Bend, Oregon. Photograph: AP

“There was no intent to be heavy-handed and we certainly understand maybe how that was taken,” she said. “We own this large collection of public art and really want to bring awareness to the community that applying adhesives does harm the art. So as stewards of the collection, we wanted to share that on social media.”

The city has so far spent $1,500 on removing googly eyes from seven of the eight sculptures affected, Mitchell said, and has started treating some of the art pieces, which are made of different types of metal such as bronze and steel. The Phoenix Rising sculpture might need to be repainted entirely, she said.

For some, the googly eyes – like the other holiday objects – provide a welcome boost of seasonal cheer.

“I look forward to seeing the creativity of whoever it is that decorates the roundabouts during the holidays,” one social media commenter said. “Brings a smile to everyone to see silliness.”

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