Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Columbus' Last Appeal to Queen Isabella is a statuary group which was previously installed in the California State Capitol in Sacramento in 1883. [1] It was the work of Larkin Goldsmith Mead (1835-1910). The statues were removed in 2020. [2]
The bronze sculptural group topping off the monument depicts a meeting of Columbus with Queen Isabella, seated on her throne. The upper part of the pedestal serves as a staircase on which Columbus stops to bow to the queen. [4] The sculptural group was also reportedly set to include a figure of Boabdil, but the idea just fell apart. [5]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Hosmer exhibited her sculpture of Queen Isabella, commissioned by the Queen Isabella Association, [16] in the California State Building at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. The statue was exhibited again in 1894 at the California Midwinter International Exposition .
Statue of Harrison Gray Otis; Statue of Jerry Coleman; Statue of Jerry West; Statue of Junípero Serra (U.S. Capitol) Statue of Kobe and Gianna Bryant; Statue of Luc Robitaille; Statue of Lucille Ball (Palm Springs, California) Statue of Oscar De La Hoya; Statue of Óscar Romero; Statue of Pete Wilson; Statue of Sonny Bono; Statue of Tony Gwynn ...
Queen Isabella, also known as Queen Isabella (1451–1504), [1] is an outdoor sculpture of Isabella I of Castile, installed outside the Pan American Union Building of the Organization of American States at 17th Street and Constitution Avenue NW in Washington, D.C., in the United States.
The "larger-than-life", full length statue stands above a plinth adorned with a lotus blossom design and a concrete base with an anti-graffiti coating. [1] The base includes rosettes and a bronze plaque. [1] One inscription below the statue reads the text of the tablet in English, Akkadian cuneiform and Aramaic.
Isabella was a town in Kern County, California. [1] It was located 4.5 miles (7.2 km) north-northeast of Bodfish , [ 2 ] at an elevation of 2516 feet (767 m). [ 1 ] The site was inundated by Lake Isabella . [ 1 ]