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The first talking statue was the statue of Hans Christian Andersen in the King's Garden in Copenhagen [1] and, later, talking statues were created for public areas in cities such as Helsinki, New York, London, San Diego, Chicago, Vilnius, Parma, Dublin, Berlin, and Manchester. Scanning the QR code at a statue Map of Talking Statues Copenhagen
The 1901 mock-up. A monument featuring a lur blower on the new City Hall Square was first proposed by Lorenz Frølich in circa 1890. [1] Martin Nyrop, who had designed the new Copenhagen City Hall, adopted the idea and originally envisioned two columns flanking the entrance to the City Hall Square from Vesterbrogade, each topped by a Heimdallr figure with a gjallarhorn.
Saabye' sketch for the monument The statue photographed by Frederik Riise. In December 1874, it was first proposed to create a Hans Christian Andersen monument in Copenhagen to mark the writer's 70 years birthday on 2 April 1875. A committee was set up and it was announced that the monument would be placed in Rosenborg Garden on his 70-years ...
Statue of Anders Sandøe Ørsted; Statue of Asmus Jacob Carstens; Statue of Frederick VI; Statue of Georg Zoëga; Statue of Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann; Statue of Peter Jansen Wessel Tordenskiold, Copenhagen; Statue of Søren Kierkegaard
This is a list of public art in Copenhagen, ... Copenhagen City Hall Anders Bundgaard: 1897 Ref: Polycarp ... Seated Young People
Talk; Category: Sculptures in Copenhagen. ... Statues in Copenhagen (4 C, 3 P) A. Allegorical sculptures in Copenhagen (3 P) Animal sculptures in Copenhagen (1 C, 8 P) M.
At the foot of the statue sit the three Norns or goddesses of destiny in Norse mythology, Urðr (the past) who is noting the past, and Ørsted's name, on a tablet, Verðandi (the present), who with her distaff is spinning the thread of fate, and Skuld (the future), who is silently awaiting the fullness of time with a rune stick in her hand.
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