Robert Burns (Steell)
The sculpture in Central Park in 2009
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Artist | John Steell |
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Type | Sculpture |
Material | Bronze |
Subject | Robert Burns |
Location | Dundee, Dunedin, London, New York City |
Robert Burns is a bronze portrait statue of Robert Burns by John Steell. Four versions exist, in New York City, Dundee, London, and Dunedin.
Contents
New York statue
The memorial sculpture in Manhattan's Central Park was cast ca. 1880 and dedicated on October 2, 1880.[1][2] It was the first statue of Burns to be erected outside Scotland and was a gift to the City of New York from Saint Andrew's Society of the State of New York and the Scottish-American community. For this sculpture Steell closely followed the portrait of Burns painted by Alexander Nasmyth in 1787. Seated on a tree stump with a quill pen in one hand, Burns looks up to heaven. He is thinking of his true love Mary Campbell, who died at an early age. It was to her that he had written the poem "To Mary in Heaven" inscribed on the scroll at his feet.
Great Britain statues
The Dundee statue was unveiled only two weeks after the one in New York in 1880 and the third cast was erected on the Thames Embankment in London in 1884.
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Robert Burns statue, Dundee.jpg
The statue in Dundee
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Statue of Robert Burns, Victoria Embankment Gardens.jpg
The statue in London
Dunedin statue
The Dunedin statue was the last of the set to be unveiled on 24 May 1887.[3] A statue of Burns was deemed relevant to the city, both because of the city's Scottish roots (it was founded by the Free Church of Scotland in 1848), and also because one of the city's founding fathers was Rev. Thomas Burns, a nephew of the poet.
In likeness, it is closest to the London statue. There had been discussion whether to place the statue in front of the railway station, but an elevated placement in The Octagon, the central plaza of Dunedin, was eventually chosen.[4] The statue was unveiled by Miss Burns, a great-grand niece of Robert Burns. Speeches were given by former Governor and Premier of New Zealand Sir George Grey, and Richard Henry Leary, the Mayor of Dunedin.[3]
Because of its placement on what is now known as the McMillan terrace, the statue is the backdrop to many public speeches. On 27 July 1988, the statue was registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust as a Category I heritage structure with reference number 2208.[4] The statue is located at Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
See also
References
External links
- Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
- Pages with broken file links
- Pages using infobox artwork with autolinked artist field
- 1880 establishments in New York
- 1880 sculptures
- 1884 establishments in the United Kingdom
- 1887 establishments in New Zealand
- Bronze sculptures in New York
- Bronze sculptures in the United Kingdom
- Central Park
- Monuments and memorials in London
- Monuments and memorials in New York
- Monuments and memorials in New Zealand
- Monuments and memorials in Scotland
- NZHPT Category I listings in Otago
- The Octagon, Dunedin
- Outdoor sculptures in London
- Outdoor sculptures in New York City
- Outdoor sculptures in New Zealand
- Outdoor sculptures in Scotland
- Robert Burns
- Sculptures of men in New York
- Sculptures of men in New Zealand
- Sculptures of men in the United Kingdom
- Statues in England
- Statues in New York
- Statues in New Zealand