Pejorative slang term for some art in public places
Plop art (or plonk art) is a pejorative
slang term for
public art (usually large, abstract, modernist or contemporary sculpture) made for government or corporate plazas, spaces in front of office buildings, skyscraper atriums, parks, and other public venues.
The term is a form of
wordplay from the term
pop art and connotes that the work is unattractive or inappropriate to its surroundings – that it has been thoughtlessly "plopped" where it lies. The term "plop" suggests the sound of something falling heavily and suddenly. It also holds connotations to excrement.[2][3][4]
Some defenders of public art funding have tried to
reappropreate the term. The book; Plop: Recent Projects of the Public Art Fund celebrates the success of the
Public Art Fund in financing many publicly placed works of art over the last few decades, many of which are now beloved, though they may at first have been derided positively as "ploppings".[5]
"Right now architecture and sculpture are calling to each other, and calling for responses that's intelligent, not for more ghastly lumps of sculpture ... which have no sense of scale and are just plonked down in public places." —
Anthony Caro (1924–2013), English sculptor.[10]