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NEW YORK (AP) – Tupperware has been molded to many purposes: forming Jell-O rings, spin-drying salads, storing spaghetti, microwaving cereal.

But carrying an evening bag?

Yes, behold the Tupperware purse. It may still look a bit like a sandwich box, but the lace-patterned accessory is among the winners of a contest that challenged Tupperware sellers and users to get creative with the iconic plastic containers.

The winners, announced Wednesday, include a kaleidoscope, a model race car and an intricate illuminated sculpture. Their creators range from an Indian graphic artist to a French Tupperware saleswoman.

Tupperware, which turned 60 this year, is a fixture in kitchens and American popular culture. Its signature sales parties are often invoked as shorthand for 1950s suburbia, though they are still held in droves around the world.

The now-familiar containers were held up as artwork in their early days, when housewares insiders hailed their tight-sealing tops and then-unusual material. House Beautiful magazine declared them “fine art for 39 cents.”

Now, Tupperware pieces are enshrined in several major museums. A water pitcher is on display at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, said Christian Larsen, a curatorial assistant.

But Tupperware Brands Corp. doesn’t want to be viewed as a clear-plastic relic of a more domestic era. The company, based in Orlando, Fla., has spent recent years updating products and tweaking its trademark parties. One was held at a downtown Manhattan club in 2005.

The design contest is another effort to “get Tupperware seen in a very different kind of a light,” said Tupperware CEO Rick Goings.

“The same functionality and quality goes forward,” he said. “But how do you, at the same time, have fun with design and color?”

The competition, which debuted this year, aims to show how.

This year’s version drew hundreds of entries, judged by a panel of home-design and materials experts. The winners received $5,000 and trips to New York.

For Evelyn Tabaniag, a regional sales director for Tupperware in and around Manila, Philippines, the contest was a chance “to showcase the other side of me.”

Tabaniag makes fashion accessories as a hobby. She crafted several purses out of sandwich storage containers, using beaded bracelets for handles. She lined the translucent blue boxes with lace to soften the look.

Meanwhile, Rajeev Joshi, a graphic designer who runs an advertising agency in Mumbai, India, was nesting storage bowls and canisters to create a 2-foot-long Tupperware kaleidoscope.

Joshi is well versed in Tupperware. His wife, Anjali, is a demonstrator.

He says the product’s variety inspired his winning entry: “To me, the kaleidoscope is the only object on this planet which can give you unlimited design possibility, and it’s similar with the Tupperware ideology.”

Stella Filippou modeled a Formula One race car entirely out of Tupperware items. The wheels alone involved jelly molds, potato mashers and flexible baking forms.

As a Tupperware demonstrator in Volos, Greece, “I live in a car,” Filippou, explained through an interpreter. But her model takes some creative license – she actually drives a Ford van.

Kriss Ulve saw a fish’s eye in a water-pitcher top. From there, she painstakingly pieced together a striking sculpture. Bowl covers form the fish’s scales, while salad utensils make spiny fins. Carved-up canisters stand in for waves.

A Tupperware demonstrator from Ploemeur, France, Ulve was thrilled to be recognized for her creativity.

“It’s like a dream for me, ” Ulve said through an interpreter. “Because for all the artists in the world, it’s very hard to be known.”

The winning entries and more than 20 others will be on display through Saturday at the Time Warner Center in Columbus Circle.

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