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Alamo, also known as the Astor Place Cube or simply The Cube, is an outdoor sculpture by Tony Rosenthal, located on Astor Place, in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It is a black cube, 8 feet (2.4 m) long on each side, mounted on a corner. The cube is made of Cor-Ten steel and weighs about 1,800 pounds (820 kg). The ...
Endover, [1] popularly known as The Cube, is an interactive sculpture on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Endover is one of a series of monumental cubes in CorTen steel by American abstract sculptor Tony Rosenthal , which also includes Alamo in the East Village of New York .
This allowed the expansion of the "Alamo Plaza", where the Alamo Cube is located, south to the southern sidewalk of Astor Place between Lafayette Street and Cooper Square, and the creation of an expanded sidewalk north of the Cooper Union Foundation Building. The Astor Place subway entrance plaza was also redesigned, and Fourth Avenue south of ...
Alamo, Astor Place, New York City, 1967. This "established Rosenthal as a master of monumental public sculpture, and something of a standard bearer of the contemporary structurist esthetic." [11] He stated: "It is…important the sculpture interact with the public." [12] The Cube "Endover", The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1968.
Lil Durk - Signed to the Streets 3 (Only The Family/Alamo) Nightly - The Sound Of Your Voice; Mike WiLL Made-It - Creed II: The Album (EarDrummers) Moneybagg Yo - RESET (N-Less) J.I.D - DiCaprio 2 (Dreamville) The 1975 - A Brief Inquiry into Online Relationships (Dirty Hit) Blaise Moore - TEMPORARY HER; Ice Cube - Everythangs Corrupt (Lench Mob)
The current record-holder for a standard 3x3x3 cube is 22-year-old Korean American Max Park, who solved the Rubik’s Cube in 3.13 seconds at a competition in Long Beach, California last year ...
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The change in Lafayette Street's history is epitomized by the construction of the Schermerhorn Building in 1888 to replace the Schermerhorn mansion, where Mrs. William Colford Schermerhorn had redecorated the interior to resemble Louis XV's Versailles, it was thought, to give a French-themed costume ball in 1854 for six hundred New Yorkers, [7] at which the German Cotillion was introduced in ...