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It is dominated by an 800-quintal (80-tonne) bronze/copper-alloy [3] sculpture by Pericle Fazzini entitled La Resurrezione (Italian for The Resurrection). [4] [5] A smaller meeting hall, known as Synod Hall (Aula del Sinodo), is located in the building as well. This hall sits at the east end on a second floor.
The Resurrection (La Resurrezione) is a bronze and brass sculpture by Pericle Fazzini in the Paul VI Audience Hall in Rome. [1] Intended to capture the anguish of 20th century mankind living under the threat of nuclear war, La Resurrezione depicts Jesus rising from a nuclear crater in the Garden of Gethsemane. Fazzini summarized the action of ...
Indianapolis Art Center Slightly Romanesque/Newhall 43: Robert Curtis: 1981 Indianapolis Art Center: Concrete, metal: Indianapolis Art Center Sometimes I Sits: Michael Helbing: 2005 Indianapolis Art Center Indianapolis Art Center Spanish Gate Lucio Ruiz Rojas
Punctuation Spire was originally commissioned in 1981 by A. Alfred Taubman for the Beverly Center, an eight-story shopping mall in Los Angeles, California. [1] It was later gifted to Herron School of Art and Design. [1] The sculpture was initially intended to be displayed in the foyer of Eskenazi Hall, but it was found to be too tall for the space.
Two of the eight sculptures depicting the Values of Civilization. Alexander Doyle's set of eight sculptures depicting the Values of Civilization (Agriculture, Art, Commerce, History, Justice, Law, Liberty, and Oratory) were commissioned for the Statehouse in the late 1880s and remain among the most prominent interior sculptures. [4]
Paul Fjelde: Indiana Statehouse Bronze: 50.75 in × 33.25 in × 1 in State of Indiana Here I Grew Up: Garo Z. Antreasian: 1962 Indiana Government Center North Bysantine Smalti 70 × 25 ft. State of Indiana Plaque honoring 1st religious service in Indianapolis: Howard Petty: 1924 Indiana Statehouse Values of Civilization: Alexander Doyle: 1888 ...
The theater portion of the building is now known as the Murat Theatre at Old National Centre or simply the Murat Theatre and houses the oldest extant stage house in downtown Indianapolis. It is the only Shrine Center in the world with a name of French origin and is the largest Shrine Center in North America. [1] [2]
James Wille Faust's The Herron Arch 1 in the IUPUI Public Art Collection. In 2009, the IUPUI Public Art Collection added four new sculptures lent by the Indianapolis Museum of Art: Sasson Soffer’s East Gate/West Gate (1973), Will Horwitt’s Spaces with Iron (1972), Shan Zou Zhou’s Portrait of History (1997), and John Francis Torreano’s Mega-Gem (1989).