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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 ...
Part of the Cleveland Institute of Art: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Downtown Cleveland Hall of fame - Music Sculpture Center: University Circle Art website, gGallery for sculpture Slovenian Museum & Archives St. Clair - Superior Ethnic Slovenian Museum: SPACES Gallery Ohio City: Art website, contemporary art Steamship William G. Mather Maritime ...
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.
sculpture: bronze: 9 feet x 44 inches x 42 inches (2.7 m x 1.1 m x 1 m) City of Detroit [12] Gracehoper: Detroit Institute of Arts: 1961: Tony Smith: sculpture: steel and paint: 23 × 22 × 46 feet (7 m 1 cm × 6 m 70.6 cm × 14 m 2.1 cm) Detroit Institute of Arts [13]
This expansive and diverse exhibition includes more than 30 Detroit-area sculptors, ranging from emerging to renowned, and will include drinks, live music, and a food truck. Annex Gallery, 333 ...
In 1928, the Music Hall and Little Theater were added at the south end of Public Auditorium, and a terrace added to the north end. [5] The stage between the main hall and Music Hall was shared by both halls by employing a curtain system. In 1936, two underground spaces were added to Public Auditorium.
The Music Hall expansion, which has been touted by its proponents as a celebration of Detroit’s music heritage and an embrace of its cultural future, is now set for a summer groundbreaking, with ...
Detroit Opera continues to push and shove at the boundaries of what the art form can achieve with John Cage’s “Europeras 3 & 4.”