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Showing posts from August, 2017

Dante Photo Sculpture

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Detail of Dante Alighieri by Enrico Pazzi, 1865 Piazza di Santa Croce Florence, May 2017

Knights of Pythias Photo Sculpture

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� If fraternal love held all men bound, how beautiful this world would be � ( Justus H. Rathbone ) The Pythian Temple West 70th Street New York, September 2008 �The Knights of Pythias is a fraternal organization and secret society founded in Washington, D.C., on 19 February 1864. Knights of Pythias in a parade in Racine, Wisconsin, circa 1910 The Knights of Pythias was the first fraternal organization to receive a charter under an act of the United States Congress. It was founded by Justus H. Rathbone, who had been inspired by a play by the Irish poet John Banim about the legend of Damon and Pythias. This legend illustrates the ideals of loyalty, honor, and friendship that are the center of the order. The order has over 2,000 lodges in the United States and around the world, with a total membership of over 50,000 in 2003. Some lodges meet in structures referred to as Pythian Castles.� ( Knights of Pythias , Wikipedia)

Fa�ade of the Madonna dellOrto Photo Sculpture

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Fa�ade of the church of the Madonna dellOrto Campo della Madonna dellOrto, Cannaregio Venice, September 2013 �The fa�ade, built in 1460�1464, has sloping sides and is in brickwork, divided in three parts by two pilasters strips. The two side sections have quadruple mullioned windows, while the central has a large rose window. The portal is surmounted by a pointed arch with white stone decorations portraying, on the summit, St. Christopher, the Madonna and the Archangel Gabriel by Nicol� di Giovanni Fiorentino and Antonio Rizzo. Under is a tympanum, in porphyry, supported by circular pilaster strips. The whole is included into a porch with Corinthian columns. The upper central section is decorated by small arches and bas-reliefs with geometrical motifs. The upper sides have instead twelve niches each, containing statues of the Apostles. Five other Gothic niches are in the central section, with 18th-century statues representing Prudence, Charity, Faith, Hope and Temperance, taken from th

Fa�ade of the Madonna dell'Orto Photo Sculpture

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Fa�ade of the church of the Madonna dell'Orto Campo della Madonna dell'Orto, Cannaregio Venice, September 2013 �The fa�ade, built in 1460�1464, has sloping sides and is in brickwork, divided in three parts by two pilasters strips. The two side sections have quadruple mullioned windows, while the central has a large rose window. The portal is surmounted by a pointed arch with white stone decorations portraying, on the summit, St. Christopher, the Madonna and the Archangel Gabriel by Nicol� di Giovanni Fiorentino and Antonio Rizzo. Under is a tympanum, in porphyry, supported by circular pilaster strips. The whole is included into a porch with Corinthian columns. The upper central section is decorated by small arches and bas-reliefs with geometrical motifs. The upper sides have instead twelve niches each, containing statues of the Apostles. Five other Gothic niches are in the central section, with 18th-century statues representing Prudence, Charity, Faith, Hope and Temperance, tak

Yellow Vests Photo Sculpture

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Yellow vests at the London Fashion Week 2016 Brewer Street, Soho London, September 2016

Hercules Photo Sculpture

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�Ercole e Caco� ( Hercules and Cacus ) by Baccio Bandinelli , 1534 Piazza della Signoria Florence, May 2017 �Hercules and Cacus was commissioned by the Medici pope Clement VII, who had been shown a wax model. The supplied block of Carrara marble was not big enough to execute Bandinellis wax model. He had to make new wax models, one of which was chosen by the pope as the final draft. Bandinelli had already carved the sculpture as far as the abdomen of Hercules, when during the 1527 Sack of Rome, the pope was taken prisoner. Meanwhile, in Florence, republican enemies of the Medici took advantage of the chaos to exile Ippolito de Medici. Bandinelli, a supporter of the Medici, was also exiled. In 1530 Emperor Charles V retook Florence after a long siege. Pope Clement VII subsequently installed his illegitimate son Alessandro de Medici as duke of Tuscany. Bandinelli then returned to Florence and continue work on the statue till completed in 1534, and transported from the Opera del Duomo to

Hercules Photo Sculpture

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�Ercole e Caco� ( Hercules and Cacus ) by Baccio Bandinelli , 1534 Piazza della Signoria Florence, May 2017 �Hercules and Cacus was commissioned by the Medici pope Clement VII, who had been shown a wax model. The supplied block of Carrara marble was not big enough to execute Bandinelli's wax model. He had to make new wax models, one of which was chosen by the pope as the final draft. Bandinelli had already carved the sculpture as far as the abdomen of Hercules, when during the 1527 Sack of Rome, the pope was taken prisoner. Meanwhile, in Florence, republican enemies of the Medici took advantage of the chaos to exile Ippolito de' Medici. Bandinelli, a supporter of the Medici, was also exiled. In 1530 Emperor Charles V retook Florence after a long siege. Pope Clement VII subsequently installed his illegitimate son Alessandro de' Medici as duke of Tuscany. Bandinelli then returned to Florence and continue work on the statue till completed in 1534, and transported from the Oper

Park Kolonnaden Photo Sculpture

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Park Kolonnaden at Potsdamer Platz, offices and commercial spaces, by Giorgio Grassi , 2001 Gabriele-Tergit-Promenade Berlin, September 2011

Colorful Wall Photo Sculpture

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A colorful wall outside a shop Via del Capitano Siena, April 2017

Oscar Wilde Photo Sculpture

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�A conversation with Oscar Wilde� by Maggi Hambling , 1998 Adelaide Street London, September 2016 � A Conversation with Oscar Wilde is an outdoor sculpture and the first public monument dedicated to Oscar Wilde, located in London, United Kingdom. The memorial was first suggested during the 1980s and early 1990s by fans of his work, including Derek Jarman. Following Jarmans death in 1994, a committee called "A Statue for Oscar Wilde" was formed to bring a tribute to fruition. The committee included the actors Dame Judi Dench and Sir Ian McKellen, and the poet Seamus Heaney. From sketches submitted by twelve artists, six were chosen to create models of their concepts. Maggi Hamblings �witty and amusing� work was chosen for the memorial. It features Wildes bronze head rising from a green granite sarcophagus which also serves as a bench. Wilde is also depicted holding a cigarette. The work is inscribed with a quotation from his play Lady Windermeres Fan: �We are all in the gutte

Oscar Wilde Photo Sculpture

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�A conversation with Oscar Wilde� by Maggi Hambling , 1998 Adelaide Street London, September 2016 � A Conversation with Oscar Wilde is an outdoor sculpture and the first public monument dedicated to Oscar Wilde, located in London, United Kingdom. The memorial was first suggested during the 1980s and early 1990s by fans of his work, including Derek Jarman. Following Jarman's death in 1994, a committee called "A Statue for Oscar Wilde" was formed to bring a tribute to fruition. The committee included the actors Dame Judi Dench and Sir Ian McKellen, and the poet Seamus Heaney. From sketches submitted by twelve artists, six were chosen to create models of their concepts. Maggi Hambling's �witty and amusing� work was chosen for the memorial. It features Wilde's bronze head rising from a green granite sarcophagus which also serves as a bench. Wilde is also depicted holding a cigarette. The work is inscribed with a quotation from his play Lady Windermere's Fan: �We

Shoe Planter Photo Sculpture

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Shoe planter with a succulent Piazza SantElisabetta Florence, May 2017

Shoe Planter Photo Sculpture

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Shoe planter with a succulent Piazza Sant'Elisabetta Florence, May 2017

Dragon and Umbrella Photo Sculpture

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Chinese dragon and umbrella, Casa Bruno Cuadros Casa dels Paraig�es (House of Umbrellas) La Rambla / Pla de la Boqueria Barcelona, March 2017 �La Rambla is an endless box of surprises. A box that opens and allows us to glimpse jewels, including this allegory to Orientalism, the Casa Bruno Cuadros, which used to be an umbrella shop of Barcelona in its time. Its style, similar to modernisme with its use of colour and the delicacy of its decorations, have made the Casa Bruno Cuadros a worthy addition to the photograph albums of many of Barcelona�s visitors. It was 1883 when the architect Josep Vilaseca undertook the refurbishment of the Casa Bruno Cuadros and the umbrella shop on the ground floor. It was just a few years before the 1888 Universal Exhibition and Barcelona was in the throes of expansion, with interesting buildings being built all over the city. The Catalan home-grown art-nouveau movement, modernisme, was gaining momentum and, with it, the taste for Oriental decorations. The

Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini Photo Sculpture

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Chiesa della Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini (Church of the Most Holy Trinity of Pilgrims) Via dei Pettinari Rome, April 2013 �In 1722, the Piedmontese merchant Giovanni Battista de Rossi commissioned Giuseppe Sardi to build the fa�ade using designs by Francesco De Sanctis. The stucco statues on the fa�ade were competed by Bernardino Ludovisi.� ( Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini , Wikipedia)

Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini Photo Sculpture

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Chiesa della Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini (Church of the Most Holy Trinity of Pilgrims) Via dei Pettinari Rome, April 2013 �In 1722, the Piedmontese merchant Giovanni Battista de' Rossi commissioned Giuseppe Sardi to build the fa�ade using designs by Francesco De Sanctis. The stucco statues on the fa�ade were competed by Bernardino Ludovisi.� ( Santissima Trinit� dei Pellegrini , Wikipedia)

Clarges Mews Photo Sculpture

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Clarges Mews, Mayfair London, September 2016

Sassetti Chapel Photo Sculpture

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Cappella Sassetti ( Sassetti Chapel ) by Domenico Ghirlandaio Basilica of Santa Trinita , piazza Santa Trinita Florence, May 2017 �Francesco Sassetti (1421�1490) was a rich banker and a member of the Medici entourage, for which he directed the Medici Bank. In 1478 he acquired the chapel of St. Francis in Santa Trinita, after his proposal to add a decoration portraying the saint had been rejected by the Dominicans of Santa Maria Novella, where his family had had a chapel (later also frescoed by Ghirlandaio, and now known as the Tornabuoni Chapel) since the 14th century. He commissioned the execution of the frescoes from the most famed artist of the city, Domenico Ghirlandaio. The date of the contract is that signed next to the portraits of Sassetti and his wife (December 25, 1480), although the work was not carried out until between 1483 and 1486. The central altarpiece, depicting the Adoration of the Shepherds, is dated 1485. Ghirlandaio portrayed numerous figures of contemporary Flore

Saurien Photo Sculpture

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�Saurien� by Alexander Calder , 1975 590 Madison Avenue (IBM Building) Madison Avenue at East 57th Street New York, September 2008

Dolce & Gabbana Photo Sculpture

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Dolce & Gabbana boutique Via Monte Napoleone Milano, November 2016

My Children Photo Sculpture

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�My Children� by Allister Bowtell, 2002 Duke of York Square London, September 2016 �Allister Bowtell, who has died of prostate cancer aged 66, was a fine sculptor, an exuberant model maker for television and films, and a larger than life character. He was a former chairman of Chelsea Arts Club - one of the few to be hauled before his own disciplinary committee - a leading light of the London Sketch Club and vice-president of the Vesta Rowing Club. His best-known recent work was the bronze sculpture of two children playing, commissioned by the Cadogan Estate for the Sloane Square refurbishment in London. He made the statues of Melpomene and Euterpe for Oxfords Bodleian Library. In contrast, for television he made models for Dr Who, including the original cybermen, and an edible bunch of flowers for Benny Hill. He made Rod Hulls emu, and Tweedledum and Tweedledee for Jonathan Millers Alice. He made props for Monty Python and The Goodies, and body moulds for The Joys of Sex. He made a gia

My Children Photo Sculpture

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�My Children� by Allister Bowtell, 2002 Duke of York Square London, September 2016 �Allister Bowtell, who has died of prostate cancer aged 66, was a fine sculptor, an exuberant model maker for television and films, and a larger than life character. He was a former chairman of Chelsea Arts Club - one of the few to be hauled before his own disciplinary committee - a leading light of the London Sketch Club and vice-president of the Vesta Rowing Club. His best-known recent work was the bronze sculpture of two children playing, commissioned by the Cadogan Estate for the Sloane Square refurbishment in London. He made the statues of Melpomene and Euterpe for Oxford's Bodleian Library. In contrast, for television he made models for Dr Who, including the original cybermen, and an edible bunch of flowers for Benny Hill. He made Rod Hull's emu, and Tweedledum and Tweedledee for Jonathan Miller's Alice. He made props for Monty Python and The Goodies, and body moulds for The Joys of Sex

Polizia Municipale Photo Sculpture

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Polizia Municipale ( Municipal Police ) Piazza Santa Croce Florence, May 2017

The Palau de la M�sica Catalana Photo Sculpture

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Palau de la M�sica Catalana by Llu�s Dom�nech i Montaner, 1908 Carrer de Sant Pere M�s Alt Barcelona, March 2017 �The Palau de la M�sica Catalana (Palace of Catalan Music) is a concert hall in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Designed in the Catalan modernista style by the architect Llu�s Dom�nech i Montaner, it was built between 1905 and 1908 for the Orfe� Catal�, a choral society founded in 1891 that was a leading force in the Catalan cultural movement that came to be known as the Renaixen�a (Catalan Rebirth). It was inaugurated February 9, 1908. The project was financed primarily by the society, but important financial contributions also were made by Barcelonas wealthy industrialists and bourgeoisie. The Palau won the architect an award from the Barcelona City Council in 1909, given to the best building built during the previous year. Between 1982 and 1989, the building underwent extensive restoration, remodeling, and extension under the direction of architects Oscar Tusquets and Carle

The Palau de la M�sica Catalana Photo Sculpture

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Palau de la M�sica Catalana by Llu�s Dom�nech i Montaner, 1908 Carrer de Sant Pere M�s Alt Barcelona, March 2017 �The Palau de la M�sica Catalana (Palace of Catalan Music) is a concert hall in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Designed in the Catalan modernista style by the architect Llu�s Dom�nech i Montaner, it was built between 1905 and 1908 for the Orfe� Catal�, a choral society founded in 1891 that was a leading force in the Catalan cultural movement that came to be known as the Renaixen�a (Catalan Rebirth). It was inaugurated February 9, 1908. The project was financed primarily by the society, but important financial contributions also were made by Barcelona's wealthy industrialists and bourgeoisie. The Palau won the architect an award from the Barcelona City Council in 1909, given to the best building built during the previous year. Between 1982 and 1989, the building underwent extensive restoration, remodeling, and extension under the direction of architects Oscar Tusquets and

Giardini Luzzati Photo Sculpture

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Giardini Luzzati (Luzzati Gardens) Piazza Giardini Luzzati Genoa, April 2016

St Christophers Place Photo Sculpture

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St Christophers Place Barrett Street, Marylebone London, September 2016

St Christopher's Place Photo Sculpture

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St Christopher's Place Barrett Street, Marylebone London, September 2016

San Gaetano Photo Sculpture

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San Gaetano , also known as Santi Michele e Gaetano Piazza Antinori Florence, May 2017 �The church was built for the Theatine order, who obtained funding from the noble families in Florence, including the Medicis. Cardinal Carlo de Medici was particularly concerned with the work, and his name is inscribed on the fa�ade. Building took place between 1604 and 1648. The original designs were by Bernardo Buontalenti but a number of architects had a hand in building it, each of whom changed the design. The two most important architects were Matteo Nigetti and Gherardo Silvani. The church is also known as the Church of Santi Michele e Gaetano, because it was built at the site of a Romanesque church, San Michele Bertelde, dedicated to Saint Michael the Archangel. The new church was dedicated to Saint Cajetan, one of the founders of the Theatine order, though the church could not formally be named after him until his canonisation in 1671.� ( San Gaetano , Wikipedia)

San Gaetano Photo Sculpture

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San Gaetano , also known as Santi Michele e Gaetano Piazza Antinori Florence, May 2017 �The church was built for the Theatine order, who obtained funding from the noble families in Florence, including the Medicis. Cardinal Carlo de' Medici was particularly concerned with the work, and his name is inscribed on the fa�ade. Building took place between 1604 and 1648. The original designs were by Bernardo Buontalenti but a number of architects had a hand in building it, each of whom changed the design. The two most important architects were Matteo Nigetti and Gherardo Silvani. The church is also known as the Church of Santi Michele e Gaetano, because it was built at the site of a Romanesque church, San Michele Bertelde, dedicated to Saint Michael the Archangel. The new church was dedicated to Saint Cajetan, one of the founders of the Theatine order, though the church could not formally be named after him until his canonisation in 1671.� ( San Gaetano , Wikipedia)

The Amazon Photo Sculpture

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Amazon by James Pradier, 1852 Cirque dhiver (Winter Circus), rue Amelot Quartier de la Folie-M�ricourt, 11e arrondissement Paris, July 2012 �Two equestrian statues framed the entrance: a seductive Amazon by James Pradier on the left (which is said to have been modeled after the famous equestrienne, Antoinette Lejars, and was the second version of a statue whose first version adorned the fa�ade of the Cirque des Champs-Eys�es), and a Greek warrior by Duret and Bosio, on the right. Frieze and statues are still in evidence today, but the Victory holding a lantern, which originally topped the building, has long disappeared.� ( Cirque dHiver , Circopedia)

The Amazon Photo Sculpture

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Amazon by James Pradier, 1852 Cirque d'hiver (Winter Circus), rue Amelot Quartier de la Folie-M�ricourt, 11e arrondissement Paris, July 2012 �Two equestrian statues framed the entrance: a seductive Amazon by James Pradier on the left (which is said to have been modeled after the famous equestrienne, Antoinette Lejars, and was the second version of a statue whose first version adorned the fa�ade of the Cirque des Champs-Eys�es), and a Greek warrior by Duret and Bosio, on the right. Frieze and statues are still in evidence today, but the Victory holding a lantern, which originally topped the building, has long disappeared.� ( Cirque d'Hiver , Circopedia)

Lucio Dalla Photo Sculpture

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Stenciled Lucio Dalla Piazza de Celestini Bologna, June 2015 �As the title of one of his most famous songs states, Lucio Dalla was born on March 4, 1943, and became one of the most important, as well as most popular, figures in Italian pop music of the second half of the 20th century. Dallas career was a fascinating musical rollercoaster through several distinct periods. More than once he managed to enrapture and then enrage fans and critics with his sudden changes of musical direction, which were, as is often the case in Italy, invariably perceived as sheer ideological betrayals. Still, at the same time that he was alienating one audience, he was attracting a new and often bigger one. Typically unfazed by controversy, Dalla never let criticism get behind his perennial sad buffoon fa�ade, and kept doing things his way, even at the risk of self-parody. By the early 21st century, Dalla had long become an untouchable icon of Italian pop culture as everybodys favorite mischievous uncle.� (

Lucio Dalla Photo Sculpture

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Stenciled Lucio Dalla Piazza de' Celestini Bologna, June 2015 �As the title of one of his most famous songs states, Lucio Dalla was born on March 4, 1943, and became one of the most important, as well as most popular, figures in Italian pop music of the second half of the 20th century. Dalla's career was a fascinating musical rollercoaster through several distinct periods. More than once he managed to enrapture and then enrage fans and critics with his sudden changes of musical direction, which were, as is often the case in Italy, invariably perceived as sheer ideological betrayals. Still, at the same time that he was alienating one audience, he was attracting a new and often bigger one. Typically unfazed by controversy, Dalla never let criticism get behind his perennial sad buffoon fa�ade, and kept doing things his way, even at the risk of self-parody. By the early 21st century, Dalla had long become an untouchable icon of Italian pop culture as everybody's favorite mischi

International Seafarers Memorial Photo Sculpture

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International Seafarers Memorial by Michael Sandle , 2001 International Maritime Organization Headquarters Albert Embankment, Lambeth London, September 2016 �The International Maritime Organization has announced that renowned British sculptor, Michael Sandle has been chosen to create a memorial to the world�s seafarers at the Organization�s riverside headquarters on the Albert Embankment in London. He has been chosen to execute the sculpture based on the proposed design submitted � which is very clearly based on a cargo ship. Of his design Michael Sandle writes, �I have chosen a ship because it signals immediately and unmistakably what the Organization is about�.� (International Maritime Organization)

The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio Photo Sculpture

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The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio (Old Palace) Piazza della Signoria Florence, April 2017 �Literally �towering� over Florence, the 95 mt. height Tower of Palazzo Vecchio is one of the citys unmistakable symbols and focal points. It is also one of the oldest parts of the building built between 1299 and the early 14th century, possibly to a design by Arnolfo di Cambio, as the seat of the citys government.� ( The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio , Musei Civici Fiorentini)

The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio Photo Sculpture

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The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio (Old Palace) Piazza della Signoria Florence, April 2017 �Literally �towering� over Florence, the 95 mt. height Tower of Palazzo Vecchio is one of the city's unmistakable symbols and focal points. It is also one of the oldest parts of the building built between 1299 and the early 14th century, possibly to a design by Arnolfo di Cambio, as the seat of the city's government.� ( The Tower of Palazzo Vecchio , Musei Civici Fiorentini)

El gat del Raval Photo Sculpture

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�Gato� (Cat) by Francesco Botero , 1990 Rambla del Raval Barcelona, March 2017 �Fernando Boteros Cat was purchased by Barcelona City Council in 1987. From then until 2003 the cat wandered the citys streets in search of a permanent site. His first stop-off point was the Parc de la Ciutadella, near his fellow animals at Barcelona Zoo. Then he was taken to a site by the Olympic Stadium, and a few years later he was put in a little square behind Barcelonas medieval shipyards. Finally, in 2003, the decision was taken to move him to a permanent location at the end of the newly created Rambla del Raval. It is maybe because cats have nine lives, that he has made his presence so strongly felt. Everybody recognises the figure of the bronze cat, with his chubby, rounded form, childish features and long tail. The sculpture has become an integral part of one of Barcelonas most widely redeveloped areas and is a favourite meeting place. Some brave souls even clamber onto the cats back to have their p

El gat del Raval Photo Sculpture

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�Gato� (Cat) by Francesco Botero , 1990 Rambla del Raval Barcelona, March 2017 �Fernando Botero's Cat was purchased by Barcelona City Council in 1987. From then until 2003 the cat wandered the city's streets in search of a permanent site. His first stop-off point was the Parc de la Ciutadella, near his fellow animals at Barcelona Zoo. Then he was taken to a site by the Olympic Stadium, and a few years later he was put in a little square behind Barcelona's medieval shipyards. Finally, in 2003, the decision was taken to move him to a permanent location at the end of the newly created Rambla del Raval. It is maybe because cats have nine lives, that he has made his presence so strongly felt. Everybody recognises the figure of the bronze cat, with his chubby, rounded form, childish features and long tail. The sculpture has become an integral part of one of Barcelona's most widely redeveloped areas and is a favourite meeting place. Some brave souls even clamber onto the cat&#

Palazzo Molin a San Basegio Photo Sculpture

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Palazzo Molin a San Basegio Fondamenta Zattere al Ponte Lungo Seen from the Giudecca Canal Venice, September 2013

Kingly Court Photo Sculpture

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One of the Kingly Court entrances Beak Street, Soho London, September 2016 �In the past few years Kingly Court, a three-floored mini mall off Carnaby Street comprising 21 outlets arranged around a covered courtyard, has become known as the areas food quarter. Boutiques moved out and an exciting collection of bars, cafes and restaurants took their place, creating a concentrated hub of culinary choice not easily found elsewhere in central London. Many of these eateries are temporary pop-ups, where chefs and proprietors can test-run recipes and concepts, which means theres a new opening most months.� ( Whats happening in Kingly Court, central Londons hottest food hub? , Evening Standard)

Kingly Court Photo Sculpture

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One of the Kingly Court entrances Beak Street, Soho London, September 2016 �In the past few years Kingly Court, a three-floored mini mall off Carnaby Street comprising 21 outlets arranged around a covered courtyard, has become known as the area's food quarter. Boutiques moved out and an exciting collection of bars, cafes and restaurants took their place, creating a concentrated hub of culinary choice not easily found elsewhere in central London. Many of these eateries are temporary pop-ups, where chefs and proprietors can test-run recipes and concepts, which means there's a new opening most months.� ( What's happening in Kingly Court, central London's hottest food hub? , Evening Standard)

Pentolaccia Players Photo Sculpture

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�Giocatori della pentolaccia� (Pentolaccia Players), by Giovanni Battista Capezzuoli, 1775 Giardino di Boboli ( Boboli Gardens ) Florence, January 2017

Double Schinkel Photo Sculpture

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Statue of Karl Friedrich Schinkel by Friedrich Drake, 1869 Schinkelplatz Berlin, September 2011 �Schinkel, however, is noted as much for his theoretical work and his architectural drafts as for the relatively few buildings that were actually executed to his designs. Some of his merits are best shown in his unexecuted plans for the transformation of the Athenian Acropolis into a royal palace for the new Kingdom of Greece and for the erection of the Orianda Palace in the Crimea. These and other designs may be studied in his Sammlung architektonischer Entw�rfe (1820�1837) and his Werke der h�heren Baukunst (1840�1842; 1845�1846). He also designed the famed Iron Cross medal of Prussia, and later Germany. It has been speculated, however, that due to the difficult political circumstances � French occupation and the dependency on the Prussian king � and his relatively early death, which prevented him from seeing the explosive German industrialization in the second half of the 19th century, h

Marble Well Photo Sculpture

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Monumental marble well in the courtyard Santuario di Santa Caterina (Shrine of Saint Catherine) Costa di SantAntonio Siena, April 2017 �The Shrine of Saint Catherine occupies the site of Catherines family home, where she was born in 1347 and where she lived her austere early life as a Dominican affiliate. The house has been much adapted; it is now a series of chapels dedicated to the beloved saint. The monumental marble well in the courtyard dates to the 15th or 16th century.� ( Shrine of St. Catherine , Sacred Destinations)

Marble Well Photo Sculpture

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Monumental marble well in the courtyard Santuario di Santa Caterina (Shrine of Saint Catherine) Costa di Sant'Antonio Siena, April 2017 �The Shrine of Saint Catherine occupies the site of Catherine's family home, where she was born in 1347 and where she lived her austere early life as a Dominican affiliate. The house has been much adapted; it is now a series of chapels dedicated to the beloved saint. The monumental marble well in the courtyard dates to the 15th or 16th century.� ( Shrine of St. Catherine , Sacred Destinations)