 New York's Guggenheim Museum has some sculptures made of automobile parts. The sculptures are the work of American artist John Chamberlain. He died in December of 2011 at the age of 84. The Guggenheim Museum organized a show of Chamberlain's work. Susan Davidson tells how he reshaped the cars. He is able to choose the positioning of the colors, the fit of the shapes that he brings together, the sound that the metal makes when he assembles it. She says John Chamberlain used common materials in an uncommon way. In addition to old cars, he worked with urethane foam, plastic and aluminum foil. His sculptures were placed away from the museum's walls so people could see them from all sides. Writer Deborah Berg says the sculptures offer the imagination an unlimited number of images. Every time you're looking you're going to see something else. I'm sure if I walk back through this part of it today I'll see very different images. Wynette Balangy from Louisiana says that at first she did not like the show. But as I traveled up the Rotunda it started to make more sense to me and I thought that it became more interesting as he changed the way that he worked with the materials. Declan Kennedy is from Ireland. He likes the building but not the exhibit. I think it just looks like a lot of scrunched up metal. So it doesn't appeal to me. I'm Steve Ember.