Tag Archives: Statue

Taylor Swift Reacts to Junior Jewels T-Shirt Projection Onto Christ the Redeemer Statue: ‘There’s No Way That’s Real’ | Video – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Taylor Swift Reacts to Junior Jewels T-Shirt Projection Onto Christ the Redeemer Statue: ‘There’s No Way That’s Real’ | Video Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Taylor Swift’s ‘Junior Jewels’ T-Shirt Shows Up on Brazil’s Christ the Redeemer Statue! Entertainment Tonight
  3. Rio’s iconic Christ statue welcomes Taylor Swift with open arms thanks to Swifties and a priest The Associated Press
  4. Taylor Swift Talks Christ Statue Honor In Brazil UPROXX
  5. Message to Taylor Swift Projected on Rio’s Christ the Redeemer Statue Stirs Controversy – Priest Responds ChurchPOP
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Taylor Swift’s ‘Junior Jewels’ T-Shirt Shows Up on Brazil’s Christ the Redeemer Statue! – Entertainment Tonight

  1. Taylor Swift’s ‘Junior Jewels’ T-Shirt Shows Up on Brazil’s Christ the Redeemer Statue! Entertainment Tonight
  2. Taylor Swift Reacts to Junior Jewels T-Shirt Projection Onto Christ the Redeemer Statue: ‘There’s No Way That’s Real’ | Video Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Rio’s Christ the Redeemer statue lights up for arrival of Taylor Swift NME
  4. Christ the Redeemer statue lights up to welcome Taylor Swift Manila Bulletin Online
  5. Rio’s iconic Christ statue welcomes Taylor Swift with open arms thanks to Swifties and a priest The Associated Press
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Ukraine pulls down Soviet hammer and sickle from towering 335ft ‘Motherland’ statue in heart of Kyiv commemora – Daily Mail

  1. Ukraine pulls down Soviet hammer and sickle from towering 335ft ‘Motherland’ statue in heart of Kyiv commemora Daily Mail
  2. Soviet emblem cut off Ukraine’s Motherland Monument statue in Kyiv | WION Originals WION
  3. Kyiv’s Motherland monument gets a makeover — but at what cost? POLITICO Europe
  4. Soviet symbol removed from Kyiv landmark in latest step in ’de-russification’ • FRANCE 24 FRANCE 24 English
  5. Kyiv’s iconic Motherland monument to bear Tryzub instead of Hammer and Sickle Yahoo News
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Adele Told Sylvester Stallone Offer To Buy His House Was A “No Deal” If Rocky Statue Was Not Included – Deadline

  1. Adele Told Sylvester Stallone Offer To Buy His House Was A “No Deal” If Rocky Statue Was Not Included Deadline
  2. Sly Stallone REACTS to Adele Keeping ‘Rocky’ Statue at Former Mansion Entertainment Tonight
  3. Adele told Sylvester Stallone ‘no deal’ on buying Los Angeles mansion without ‘Rocky’ statue Fox Business
  4. Sylvester Stallone says Adele made keeping Rocky statue a deal breaker in buying his California mansion The Mercury News
  5. Sylvester Stallone Reveals Dealbreaker From Adele Before Buying His Los Angeles Mansion | THR News The Hollywood Reporter
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Adele told Sylvester Stallone ‘no deal’ on buying Los Angeles mansion without ‘Rocky’ statue – Fox Business

  1. Adele told Sylvester Stallone ‘no deal’ on buying Los Angeles mansion without ‘Rocky’ statue Fox Business
  2. Sly Stallone REACTS to Adele Keeping ‘Rocky’ Statue at Former Mansion Entertainment Tonight
  3. Sylvester Stallone Says Before Adele Bought His Mansion, She Told Him “No Deal” Without ‘Rocky’ Statue Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Sylvester Stallone says Adele made keeping Rocky statue a deal breaker in buying his California mansion The Mercury News
  5. Sylvester Stallone Reveals Dealbreaker From Adele Before Buying His Los Angeles Mansion | THR News The Hollywood Reporter
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Sarah Polley told to return Oscar statue in epic April Fools’ Day prank courtesy of her 11-year-old – CNN

  1. Sarah Polley told to return Oscar statue in epic April Fools’ Day prank courtesy of her 11-year-old CNN
  2. “Please Return Your Oscar” – Sarah Polley Reveals Shock At Daughter’s Convincing April Fool’s Prank Deadline
  3. Sarah Polley’s kid wins April Fools 2023 with fake Oscar return demand The A.V. Club
  4. Sarah Polley’s 11-year-old told her to return her Oscar in a prank Insider
  5. Sarah Polley posts her child’s lol April Fool’s Day prank: ‘The Oscar you received was given by mistake’ Gold Derby
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Chinese Billionaire Who Donated $1 Million to Trudeau Foundation Wanted to Build Mao Statue in Montreal – Yahoo News

  1. Chinese Billionaire Who Donated $1 Million to Trudeau Foundation Wanted to Build Mao Statue in Montreal Yahoo News
  2. Calls grow in Canada for inquiry into alleged election interference by China The Guardian
  3. No Sign of Foreign Interference That Threatened Canadian Vote, Government Says U.S. News & World Report
  4. Opinion: CSIS is worried about China interfering in our elections, even if the government isn’t The Globe and Mail
  5. Globe editorial: Shine a light on China’s election meddling. Call a public inquiry The Globe and Mail
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Martin Luther King Jr. statue in Boston draws online mockery, disdain

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The road to online mockery is paved with good intentions.

On Friday, a collection of civic organizations unveiled a 22-foot-tall bronze statue in Boston Common, the nation’s oldest public park, honoring the relationship between the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife, Coretta Scott King. Sculptor Hank Willis Thomas found inspiration in a photograph of the civil rights pioneers embracing after King learned he had won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize.

“This work is really about the capacity for each of us to be enveloped in love, and I feel enveloped in love every time I hear the names and see the faces of Dr. King and Coretta Scott King,” Thomas told the Boston Globe.

His work depicts four intertwined arms. From one angle, the limbs form a heart, representing the couple’s love. But much as Chicago’s landmark “Cloud Gate” sculpture quickly became known as “The Bean” for looking like, well, a giant bean, legions of amateur art critics aren’t seeing what Thomas intended.

Many took particular issue with the fact that the Kings were not depicted in full.

“Given that I am not White, I am safe from ANY charges of racism for saying the MLK embrace statue is aesthetically unpleasant. The famous photo should have been a FULL statue of the couple and their embrace. What a huge swing and miss in honoring the Dr & Mrs King. SAD!” tweeted Boston Herald columnist Rasheed N. Walters.

“Show me a white man that was honored with a statue of only two of his limbs,” tweeted comedian Javann Jones.

“That MLK statue looks obscene from certain angles, but when you see the whole thing you realize it’s supposed to depict the result of Martin Luther King Jr. and [Coretta] Scott King having gone through the teleporter in The Fly together,” tweeted the Daily Wire’s Frank J. Fleming.

Many others, though, cracked more vulgar jokes about what they saw as a provocative assembly of hard-to-identify body parts.

Coretta King’s cousin Seneca Scott blasted the artwork in an essay for the online journal Compact, which he titled “A Masturbatory ‘Homage’ to My Family.” “For my family, it’s rather insulting,” he wrote, adding that the “sculpture is an especially egregious example of the woke machine’s callousness and vanity” that to him seemed like an especially expensive but empty gesture.

“Ten million dollars were wasted to create a masturbatory metal homage to my legendary family members — one of the all-time greatest American families. … How could anyone fail to see that this … brings very few, if any, tangible benefits to struggling black families?” Scott wrote.

The piece, of course, was both commissioned and sculpted with good intentions. The city released a call to artists in 2017 to create a memorial to the Kings, who met in Boston, eventually choosing Thomas, a renowned Brooklyn-based artist.

On Friday, it was unveiled at an invitation-only ceremony in the same place King led 20,000 people on a freedom march more than 50 years ago.

Mayor Michelle Wu said the sculpture might help the public live up to King’s vision, “to open our eyes to the injustice of racism and bring more people into the movement for equity,” according to the Boston Globe.

“The recognition of Coretta Scott King shows that we are a city that will take on the full legacy of the Kings and challenge injustice everywhere from a place of love,” Wu said in a statement. “As we continue our work to ensure Boston is a city for everyone, this memorial is a powerful call to embrace each other more, embrace our nation’s history, and embrace what’s possible when we center community.”

“I hope people who experience ‘The Embrace’ understand or overstand the power of connection for the enhancement of our lives,” Thomas told the paper, adding, “I am excited about building markers that can direct us toward nonviolent coexistence and allow us to tell new stories about our history, our present, our future.”



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Mavericks unveil statue of franchise legend Dirk Nowitzki

DALLAS — On the night of Dirk Nowitzki’s final home game, Dallas Mavericks governor Mark Cuban promised to have the “biggest, most badass statue ever” erected in front of the American Airlines Center to honor the legend.

“It’s a promise that gives me joy to deliver on, because you earned it,” Cuban told Nowitzki on Christmas morning, minutes before the nearly 24-foot-high statue was unveiled steps from the street renamed a few years ago as Nowitzki Way.

The white bronze statue is a sculpture of Nowitzki’s iconic one-legged fadeaway jumper, the same shot that is featured as silhouettes near the left block on both ends of the American Airlines Center court. The shot became known as “The Dirk” while Nowitzki climbed to the sixth spot on the NBA’s all-time scoring list and has become part of the repertoire of several current players, including the two stars facing each other on that floor Sunday afternoon, the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James and the Mavericks’ Luka Doncic.

Doncic and several other Mavericks attended the ceremony, as did coach Jason Kidd, a former teammate of Nowitzki’s.

“One more stop: the Hall of Fame,” Kidd said, referring to Nowitzki’s certain inclusion in the next Hall of Fame class as a first-ballot selection.

Artist Omri Amrany created the statue, one of several he’s made to honor NBA legends, including Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Shaquille O’Neal. The statue is rich with details, using the shoes and uniform that Nowitzki wore while leading the Mavericks to the 2010-11 NBA championship, the franchise’s lone title.

At the base of the statue, it reads: “Loyalty never fades away,” a tribute to Nowitzki spending his entire career in Dallas, setting an NBA record by playing 21 seasons for one franchise.

“I just kind of sat down, like, ‘What do people associate you with in Dallas?'” Nowitzki said. “It was these two things. It was the fadeaway and the loyalty. We kind of combined that. It was just a fun fact that it was 21 letters for the 21 years.”

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Richmond’s last major city-owned Confederate statue is now down

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RICHMOND — Workers began dismantling this city’s last major icon to the Lost Cause on Monday morning, lifting a statue of Confederate Gen. A.P. Hill from its base in the middle of a busy intersection before a small crowd of onlookers.

After workers cut a single bolt holding the bronze statue to the stone base, a crane lifted it up and slowly lowered the figure onto a flatbed truck. The statue was secured with straps onto a bed of tires for cushioning. Next workers began chipping at the seams of the stone base to take it apart and find the layer where Hill’s remains are interred; the fact that the honoree’s body is buried beneath the statue makes the monument’s removal uniquely challenging.

Which Confederate statues are gone in the DMV — and which are still standing?

Mayor Levar Stoney arrived to watch the work, and after the statue came down said removing the city’s final Confederate statue would “turn the page and start a new chapter for our city of Richmond.”

More than a dozen other Confederate monuments around this historic city have been removed since 2020, when social-justice protests triggered by the murder of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis finally forced Richmond to confront its memorial landscape.

Two years after protests. some of Richmond’s Confederate statues remain

While the titanic, state-owned statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue became an international symbol of that year of protests, it is the Hill statue that has proved to have the most staying power. That’s because of one unique feature: Hill’s remains are buried beneath it.

A law passed by the General Assembly in 2020 allowed localities to take down Confederate statues, which up until then had been protected. But the Hill monument’s status as a grave caused the city to go through a lengthy process to get legal permission to clear the site and then arrange for the remains to be relocated.

Traffic-control barriers were ready early, but workers had waited for the morning rush to clear and for classes to get underway at a nearby elementary school before closing off the crossroads of Hermitage Road and West Laburnum Avenue on Richmond’s Northside.

Once the stone base is fully opened up by workers for Team Henry, the Black-owned contractor that has overseen demolition of almost all the city’s monuments, a crew will extract Hill’s coffin. A funeral home will transport the remains to a burial plot in Hill’s hometown of Culpeper that the city of Richmond purchased for $1,000.

Where’s Kitty Cary? The answer unlocked Black history Richmond tried to hide.

The delicate work could stretch the removal across two days, officials said. But when it’s done, the former capital of the Confederacy will be almost free of Lost Cause iconography in public spaces — an outcome that seemed unthinkable only a few years ago.

“This is the last stand for the Lost Cause in our city,” Stoney said last week after a judge swept aside an effort to claim the statue by a group of people who said they were Hill’s indirect descendants.

John Hill, 33, said he shares an ancestor with the general, who had no children of his own. Hill said he drove eight hours from his home in Ohio to watch the statue come down and was part of the group of family members who had challenged the monument’s removal in court.

“We just don’t want to see it destroyed because that’s a headstone with our family name on it,” said Hill, who wore a sweatshirt with a dramatic Confederate battle scene and the phrase, “Don’t make me open up my can of Robert E. Lee.”

What Richmond loses in divisive symbolism it gains in traffic safety, as the need to navigate around the Hill monument has made the intersection one of the city’s most dangerous.

Liz Turner, 60, a nanny who lives a block from the statue, had come out with a small group from the local civic association with coffee and doughnuts. Turner said she was glad to see the Confederate symbols come down, but she had an equally urgent mission: to remove the statue so the intersection would be safer for traffic.

“I don’t care who’s buried there — Mickey Mouse, General MacArthur, Saint Peter himself — I don’t care,” she said. “I want people to be safe at this intersection.”

A few prominent Confederate symbols remain in Richmond — most notably a trio of statues on Capitol Square outside the state Capitol. The administration of then-Gov. Ralph Northam (D) has said it was too focused on getting the Lee statue down to take on the Capitol Square statues, which would probably require action by the General Assembly. Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) has shown no interest in picking up the baton, with a spokeswoman saying via text that the governor believes “we must resist the movement to cleanse our history. The decision to remove the statues were decisions made by previous administrations/politicians.”

Richmond’s statues fell. Now these sisters aim to lift up Black history.

The Hill site is in a different area than most of the Confederate memorials that once stood around Richmond’s downtown and older inner neighborhoods. It was a rural part of Henrico County when developer Lewis Ginter created the memorial in 1891 to promote his new suburban neighborhood, later annexed by the city.

Hill, who was killed by Union troops outside Petersburg in the waning days of the war in 1865, had been buried in two other spots before being dug up and reinterred here. He had once said he did not wish to live to see the Confederacy fall, and he didn’t. But his statue saw its symbols disappear.

It has long been rumored that Hill was buried standing up inside the base of the monument. But news accounts from the time suggest that while he might have been vertical in one of the earlier burials, by the time he got to this spot the remains were little more than bones and tattered cloth.

This story is developing and will be updated.

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