Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Miró's Chicago (originally called The Sun, the Moon and One Star) [1] is a sculpture by Joan Miró in Brunswick Plaza, Chicago, United States. It is 39 feet (12 m) tall, and is made of steel , wire mesh , concrete , bronze , and ceramic tile .
Originally built as a single-family residence in a 1913, the building was converted to a hotel and restaurant in 1938, converted again to the first Hollywood Sikh Temple in 1969, and demolished to make way for a larger temple in 1986. The second, larger temple opened in 1996. [16] 1302: Yucca Vine Tower: May 31, 2024
6840 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood: Built in 1921 for the Hollywood lodge of the Masons; Included billiard room, parlor, ballroom and lodge rooms 131: Hollywood Melrose Hotel: Hollywood Melrose Hotel: July 8, 1992 : 5150-70 Melrose Ave.
Darrell Wayne Caldwell (1993–2021), rapper; Salvador "Tutti" Camarata (1913–2005), composer; Godfrey Cambridge (1933–1976), actor and comedian [14]; William ...
The Hollywood Sculpture Garden is an outdoor garden in Los Angeles dedicated to the display of sculptures by various artists, including local, national, and international artists. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was founded in May 2012, by Dr. Robby Gordon, [ 3 ] and is located at 2430 Vasanta Way, Los Angeles in the Hollywood Hills (below the Hollywood sign ).
A typical plaque found on properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of sites, buildings, structures, districts, and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic value".
Postcard circa 1940s. Designed by John M. Cooper [2] and/or E. M. Frasier, [3] the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce cite the Knickerbocker as opening as a luxury apartment house in 1925 and then converting to a hotel, [1] while the United States Department of the Interior cite the Knickerbocker as opening as a hotel 1929. [2]
Statue Park, Szoborpark or Statue Park is a park in Budapest's XXII. district, with a gathering of monumental Soviet-era statues. Liberty Statue, The Szabadság Szobor or Liberty Statue (sometimes Freedom Statue) in Budapest, Hungary, was first erected in 1947 in remembrance of the Soviet liberation of Hungary from Nazi forces during World War II.