You guys our neighborhood had an old burned out corner smoke shop that recently got rehabbed into a fancy new corner smoke shop and the new owners have installed these two life sized iron horse sculptures in their parking lot and I say
"WELCOME to our *neigh*borhood new smokeshop ppl let's build up a herd!"
Huntoon Park Wren in Topeka, Kansas
This bird statue was created to mark the site of a radio transmitter.#radio #birds #statues #section-Atlas
Huntoon Park Wren
‘What Is He Doing Here?’
George Washington turned plenty of heads as he rolled across London’s Trafalgar Square earlier this month. More…
#London #UnitedKingdom #UK #GB #England #Headlines #News #Europe #EU #Britain #georgewashington #GreatBritain #london #statue #statues #TrafalgarSquare
https://www.europesays.com/uk/195309/
Witnessing the end
Moai statues in the quarry that were never transported to the platforms, Easter Island, #Chile
Photograph: Daniel Alvarez
It's also one if the last examples of traditional three-dimensional sculptures on a Glasgow building. By the 1920s, most architectural sculptural work had shifted towards using reliefs, and by the end of the 1930s, architectural sculptures had pretty much disappeared altogether, although some later examples do exist. Personally, it's something I'd like to see brought back to help make modern buildings more distinctive and individual.
Neptune over the door of 177 Trongate in Glasgow. The building was designed by Frank Burnet and Boston and was built in 1925. The sculptor is unknown. I absolutely love the level of detail on this statue.
Cont./
Somewhat ironically, the group containing War was damaged by a German parachute mine in 1941, and it was one of two groups which were blown into the river below where they lay until they were recovered, repaired and replaced in their original positions in 1949. The bridge itself still bears the scars from the blast.
The Kelvin Way Bridge statues in Kelvingrove Park in Glasgow. Created in the 1910s by Paul Raphael Montford, the four groups, one sited at each corner represent Navigation and Shipbuilding (top left), Peace and War (top right), Philosophy and Inspiration (bottom left), and Commerce and Industry (bottom right).
Cont./
sculpture of Ashura at Kōfukuji temple in Nara, Japan (734 AD)
#art #arts #arthistory #japan #spirituality #spiritual #statue #artnet
#history #statues #sculpture #sculptures #artist #artists #design #atmuseum #museum #artmuseums #artmuseum #sculpting
Aujourd'hui, au Centre d’études nord-américaines de l’EHESS:
Jennifer Sessions (University of Virginia)
️ « Louis XVI in America »
"When protestors in Louisville, Kentucky took the streets in May 2020 to demand the prosecution of police officers who had killed Breonna Taylor in her own home on March 13 of that year, one of the most surprising reactions came from French royalists. Outraged by damage to a marble statue of Louis XVI that stood in downtown Louisville, both the Bourbon and Orléanist pretenders to the French throne, as well as monarchist press outlets and activists, denounced the accidental amputation of the statue’s hand as an insult to the memory of the French king and his role in the American Revolution. This lecture draws on my research for a book about this monument’s path from its origins in Montpellier during the Bourbon Restoration to Louisville, where it arrived in 1966. A trans-Atlantic biography of Achille Valois’s Louis XVI, the project explores local and transnational memories of a shared Franco-American history of revolution and reaction in the context of contemporary debates over a similarly shared history of slavery, colonization, and postcolonial racism."
Jennifer Sessions est professeure associée d'Histoire à l'Université de Virginie. Historienne de la France moderne et de son empire colonial, elle porte plus particulièrement son attention sur le colonialisme de peuplement et les cultures coloniales.
lundi 19 mai 2025 de 14h à 16h au Campus Condorcet. Également en visioconférence.
Inscription: https://participations.ehess.fr/demandes/__nouvelle__?seminaire=10
A blue hour photograph of the Colosseum in Rome Italy. The arches are illuminated from within creating a warm glow in the arches, while the external structure is cool in the morning light.
#rome #italy #landmark #colosseum #arches #illuminated #bluehour #night #nightphotography #statues #architecture #historic #ancient #BuyIntoArt #AYearForArt #artforsale #wallartforsale #giftideas @joancarroll
State by State Pending and Recently Passed #AntiProtestLaws: #Florida
HB 275 / SB 340: New penalties for protests near gas and oil #pipelines
Creates a new felony offense for trespassing that could cover some protests near pipelines and other infrastructure that do not involve actual property damage. The law broadly defines “#CriticalInfrastructure” to include above or belowground pipelines, as well as a range of other gas, electricity, water, mining, and telecommunications facilities. Under the law, entering onto critical infrastructure property with notice that such entrance was prohibited is a 3rd degree felony offense. As such, protesters who cause no damage but merely enter onto posted property that contains a pipeline in the course of their protest could face felony charges and up to 5 years in prison if convicted. By contrast, trespassing onto private property is generally a 2nd degree misdemeanor, punishable by at most 60 days in jail. The House bill as originally also created an overbroad “improper tampering” felony offense, which would have included any unauthorized action to “change…the physical condition of the property or any portion thereof,” or to “knowingly and intentionally… deface” critical infrastructure property, but these provisions were removed by amendment.
Full text of bill: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2022/1435/?Tab=BillHistory
Status: enacted
Introduced 25 Oct 2023; Approved by House 22 February 2024; Approved by Senate 28 February 2024; Signed by Governor #DeSantis 17 May 2024
Issue(s): Infrastructure, #Trespass
HB 1435/SB 1954: Charging protest organizers for the costs of responding to a protest
Would allow local authorities to require protest organizers to pay for "all relevant costs and fees associated with designating and enforcing" the zone established for a "special event," "including, but not limited to, costs and fees for the provision of supplemental law enforcement and sanitation services." While the bill's sponsors indicate that it was motivated by large, disruptive "pop-up" gatherings of cars like the "Daytona Truck Meet," it is written broadly enough to cover street protests and demonstrations. The bill defines a "special event" as an "unpermitted temporary activity or event organized or promoted via a social media platform" which is attended by 50 or more persons and substantially increases or disrupts the normal flow of traffic on a roadway, street, or highway." The bill also authorizes law enforcement to "enforce occupancy limits" in "special event zones"; which if applied to protests could allow police could limit the number of protest participants in a certain area.
Full text of bill: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2022/1435/?Tab=BillHistory
Status: enacted
Introduced 10 Jan 2022; Approved by House 2 March 2022; Approved by Senate 4 March 2022; Approved by Governor DeSantis 26 May 2022
Issue(s): Security Costs
HB 1/SB 484: Expanded definition of "#riot" and new penalties for #protesters
**Note: Provisions of HB1 related to the law's new definition of "riot" were preliminarily enjoined by a federal district judge on September 9, 2021, temporarily blocking enforcement of those provisions.**
Enlarges the legal definition of "riot," a 3rd degree felony, to include any group of three or more individuals whose shared intent to engage in disorderly and violent conduct results in "imminent danger" of property damage or personal injury, or actual damage or injury. Notably, the new definition does not require that the individuals' conduct be disorderly or violent, or that they commit any actual damage or injury. Under the new law, a "riot" consisting of 25 or more people, or one that "endangers the safe movement of a vehicle," is automatically an "aggravated riot," a new 2nd degree felony offense under the law. As such, large groups of protesters or ones that block traffic, even temporarily, could face up to 15 years in prison. Under the new law, "inciting" someone to participate in a riot is a 3rd degree felony, punishable by 5 years in prison. The law also creates a new criminal offense of "mob intimidation," defined as a group of three or more people who act with a "common intent" to compel "or attempt to compel" another person to "do or refrain from doing any act," or "assume, abandon, or maintain a particular viewpoint" against their will. The offense is a first degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail. The law creates a new 3rd degree felony offense, punishable by up to 5 years in prison, for anyone who "willfully and maliciously #defaces, injures, or otherwise damages by any means" #statues, #flags, #paintings, displays, or other "#memorials" and the value of the damage is more than $200. As "deface" is not defined, protesters who apply paint or graffiti to a monument in the course of a peaceful protest could face up to 5 years in prison. The law may encourage violence against protesters by creating a new affirmative defense in civil lawsuits for personal injury, death, or property damage, such that a defendant can avoid liability by establishing that the injury, death, or damage they committed "arose from" conduct by someone "acting in furtherance of a riot." Finally, the law creates a new civil right of action against a municipal government that fails to "respond appropriately to protect persons and property during a riot or unlawful assembly," making them civilly liable for damages, including personal injury or property damage. These provisions may encourage municipal governments to adopt overly aggressive law enforcement responses to protests in order to avoid lawsuits.
Full text of bill: https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2022/1435/?Tab=BillHistory
Status: enacted
Introduced 6 Jan 2021; Approved by House 26 March 2021; Approved by Senate 15 April 2021; Signed by Governor DeSantis 19 April 2021
Issue(s): Protest Supporters or Funders, Driver Immunity, #PoliceResponse, Riot, #TrafficInterference, State Liability, #StandYourGround
#FirstAmendment #CriminalizingDissent
#Authoritarianism #Fascism #Clampdown #CriminalizingProtest
#CharacteristicsOfFascism #USPol #PipelineProtests #CriminalizingDissent #AntiProtestLaws
Queen Vic, Hastings, UK.
A common sight in the alternative culture town of Hastings, on the south coast of England. The statue graces a main residential square and is regularly dressed up for an upcoming festival or parade, or just a sunny day. She looks like she secretly quite enjoys it chilling out at the beach.
The Scent of Veneration: Study shows Ancient Statues were Perfumed ~ New research suggests that ancient statues were not only painted and adorned but also covered with oils and perfumed.
https://wildhunt.org/2025/03/the-scent-of-veneration-study-shows-ancient-statues-were-perfumed.html
One of the most stunningly beautiful parks in the world, imho.
Vigeland park, Oslo.
Spiegelreflex-camera.
#photography #statues
#blackandwhite #vigeland #oslo
(I was in Norway, Oslo, many years ago)