Statues
NYC Monument Will Honor African-American Family Displaced to Make Way for Central Park
But the project has drawn criticism, particularly because the monument will stand some 20 blocks north of Seneca Village's historic location
A New Statue in Times Square Challenges the Symbolism of Confederate Monuments
The work by artist Kehinde Wiley will soon be moved to Richmond, Virginia, not far from a street lined with controversial Civil War memorials
Chief Standing Bear, Who Fought for Native American Freedoms, Is Honored With a Statue in the Capitol
‘That hand is not the color of yours, but if I pierce it, I shall feel pain,’ the chief famously said during a landmark 1879 trial
Plaque Memorializes First Icelandic Glacier Lost to Climate Change
In 2014, the Okjökull was declared dead after dwindling from over 5 square miles to a mound of "dead ice"
Statue of St. George Undergoes ‘Unrestoration’ to Salvage Botched Paint Job
A 2018 restoration attempt left the 16th-century statue looking like a cartoon character
Long-Forgotten Monument to Prison Reformer Will Be Reinstalled in New York Courthouse
Rebecca Salome Foster was known as the "Tombs Angel" in recognition of her work with inmates housed at a Manhattan prison known as "The Tombs"
New York City Monument Will Honor Transgender Activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera
The two women were instrumental in the 1969 Stonewall Uprising and spent their lives advocating for marginalized groups
The Americans Who Saw Lady Liberty as a False Idol of Broken Promises
Suffragists, African-Americans and Chinese immigrants all criticized the statue as representative of a nation that was not yet free for everyone
Philadelphia Flyers Remove Statue of Singer Kate Smith Amid Allegations of Racism
The team will also no longer play Smith’s famed rendition of ‘God Bless America’
A New Museum Sheds Light on the Statue of Liberty
The revamped building will open in May
What Should a Contemporary Monument Look Like?
A new multi-city art exhibition called "New Monuments for New Cities" tackles this question head on
In the Fair City of Verona, Star-Cross'd Lovers Want to Believe in 'La Casa di Giulietta'
The number of visitors to this self-proclaimed Shakespearean “city of love” typically swells during the week around Valentine’s Day
From Lady Liberty to Hollywood to the Middle East, These Are the Most Exciting Museums Opening in 2019
Visit new institutions devoted to mascots, spies, archaeological sites, American icons and much more this year
Easter Island Statues May Have Marked Sources of Fresh Water
A spatial analysis of the island's moai and ahu seem to line up with ancient wells and coastal freshwater seeps
The Goddess in the Margarine Tub Is Just One of 1,267 Treasures Found by the British Public in 2017
A new report reveals the pieces voluntarily recorded with the U.K.'s Portable Antiquities Scheme last year
UNC's 'Silent Sam' Could Be Coming Back to Campus. Here's What to Know
On Monday, the university's Board of Trustees unveiled a controversial proposal to build a "history and education" center to house the Confederate monument
New York Honors Shirley Chisholm, First Black Congresswoman in U.S. History, With New Statue
The firebrand politician once quipped that she would like to be remembered as a woman who ‘had guts’
India Is Building the World’s Tallest Statue—Again
The monument of the Hindu god Ram is expected to stand 725 feet tall, and it plays a role in the country’s complex political landscape
The Statue of Liberty’s Original Torch Gets a New Home
The torch, which was replaced in the 1980s, has been moved to a new museum on Liberty Island
The Future Is Female for San Francisco’s Public Art Scene
A new ordinance means that at least 30 percent of new public art will depict notable women of history, beginning with Maya Angelou
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