Rome
Double the image
Reflections in Lake Whakamaru
Vent - Austria
Rhodes 2 057
En plein ciel de Rio
It's hilly country
Houses around lake
View from the zoo
Fringilla Coelebs
At the beach club
Wild thing
Zoo view
Misty morning (Venice in monochrome 5)
Rome
An Afternoon on Santorini
Venice (7)
Glossy black cockatoos
Sulfer-crested cockatoo
Central Park (11)
All other ponderous carriages
Duke of Norfolk's tomb, Framlingham (3)
Awaiting demolition
Gibside Chapel
After the rain (Bath 2)
FED2 in Bath (8)
Morningview Bernau Black Forrest Germany
E T Phone Home
View from the Bridge
Taos Pueblo
wawel castle
oslo opera
Salt Water Creek, Timaru
Performance night
Evening in the Harbour
Sydney Opera House Details 7
GC SCF9720
GC SCF9532
Sydney Opera House Details 4
A tree in Hertfordshire
Red Spotted Purple Butterfly
Stairway to the sky
Petit pont qui conduit à l'Arborétum Yves Duteil
Bridge climbers
See also...
Keywords
Angel of the North (1)
The Angel of the North is a contemporary sculpture, designed by Antony Gormley, which is located in Gateshead, North East England.
It is Britain's largest sculpture and believed to be the world's largest angel sculpture.
It is one of the most-viewed pieces of art in the world, seen by one person every second (90,000 every day or 33 million every year).
Work on the sculpture started in July 1997 and it was assembled on site seven months later in February 1998.
The Angel was fabricated from 200 tonnes of weathering steel and is 20 metres tall with a wing span of 54 metres, almost as big as a jumbo jet.
It stands on a hill on the southern edge of Low Fell, overlooking the A1 and A167 roads into Tyneside.
It is Britain's largest sculpture and believed to be the world's largest angel sculpture.
It is one of the most-viewed pieces of art in the world, seen by one person every second (90,000 every day or 33 million every year).
Work on the sculpture started in July 1997 and it was assembled on site seven months later in February 1998.
The Angel was fabricated from 200 tonnes of weathering steel and is 20 metres tall with a wing span of 54 metres, almost as big as a jumbo jet.
It stands on a hill on the southern edge of Low Fell, overlooking the A1 and A167 roads into Tyneside.
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