LARAMIE â A 13.5-foot-tall human head sculpture thatâs stared blankly out from the busy intersection of Clark Street and Snowy Range Road In West Laramie since 2021 will be removed soon, and some locals say they wonât be sad to see the sculpture go.
âOh yeah, the âJoe Biden Head,ââ Hannah Blair replied when asked about the sculpture as she stopped by the West Laramie Fly Store to buy her husband some chewing tobacco Friday afternoon.
The sculpture has a name â âExhaling Dissolutionâ â but most everyone around Laramie knows it as the Biden head because they say it bears an uncanny resemblance to the current U.S. president.
âNo, Iâm not going to miss that,â she told Cowboy State Daily.
The sculpture also doesnât have any fans among patrons at Budâs Bar on Laramieâs west side. If fact, at least one volunteered to help dismantle it.
âIâd like to take my cutting torch to it,â Greg Jones told Cowboy State Daily.
Part Of A Rotating Display
âExhaling Dissolutionâ is part of a rotating public art display sponsored by the Laramie Public Art Coalition. Itâs scheduled to be removed probably sometime in mid-May. It will be replaced by another public art display sometime thereafter.
âExhaling Dissolutionâ was created by artist Sarah Deppe of Iowa in 2010, and was previously on public display in Iowa and Tennessee. Itâs made from cottonwood bar, steel rod and wire mesh.
The art coalition announced on social media that it will put out a call for new artwork next month.
âThat also means you will once again have a say on the artwork finalists,â the coalition stated in a Facebook post.
Not Sure What The Message Is
Blair said that she, like many other locals, has always been baffled by what the statue is supposed to represent and why it was deemed appropriate for Laramie or anywhere in Wyoming.
She thinks the artist was trying to convey a message about a need for equality.
âWe have an equal community here in Laramie,â she said. âWe support equality for gay people ⊠and Wyoming was the first state to give women the right to vote.â
After helping Blair at the cash register, West Laramie Fly Store employee Dana Warren said she hopes the next art display has a more local flavor.
âIâd like see something wildlife-themed,â she said. âSomething with deer or elk. Something that reflects how big a part of our community that sportsmen are.â
That would be a change from what the giant head really is supposed to represent. Deppe has said that the sculpture is a commentary of the huge levels of pollution humans gorge out into the environment.
And despite the speculation that the giant head with its mouth open represents â and resembles â Biden, the artist herself puts that rumor to bed, saying that it represents âno one in particular.â

Should Have Given Him A Cowboy Hat
While enjoying a drink at Budâs Bar, Marshall May also told Cowboy State Daily that he never could figure out what the sculpture meant relative to Laramie and Wyoming.
âThank goodness,â he said upon hearing that the piece is slated to be removed soon.
âI would like them to choose something thatâs a little more Laramie, a little more Wyomingâ for the next display, he said, adding that his family has been in the Laramie area for 150 years.
âPeople were joking about getting a piece of PVC pipe to put in its mouth as a cigarette and maybe putting some shades (sunglasses) on it,â May said.
âNow, if the dude had a cowboy hat on, it might not have been so bad,â he added. âAs it is, he looks like heâs been smoking too much.â
âIâve Learned To Just Look The Other Wayâ
Jones continued to criticized the statue, saying that as far as he was concerned, the only value it could have had would have been as a spooky Halloween decoration.
âThey could have just thrown a tarp over it, and maybe put some freaky lights in it for Halloween,â he said.
âYeah, glowing red lights in the eyes,â another bar patron quipped.
Until âExhaling Dissolutionâ is removed, Jones said heâll continue to try simply not noticing it as he drives along Snowy Range Road.
âIâve learned to live with it,â he said. âIâve learned to just look the other way.â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.








