Jonathan Cohen

Jonathan Cohen deceased

Posted: 08 Jun 2015


Taken: 28 Apr 2014

2 favorites     0 comments    2 345 visits

1/80 f/4.0 50.0 mm ISO 320

SONY SLT-A77V

EXIF - See more details

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...

City Shots City Shots


50 plus photographers 50 plus photographers


Sculptures of the world Sculptures of the world


Sculptures Sculptures


Statues Statues


New York New York


See more...

Keywords

sculpture
Golda Meir Square
Golda Meir
39th Street
Garment District
Broadway
New York City
New York
United States
USA
bust
cityscape
streetscape
street art
statue
גולדה מאיר‎
Metropolitan Opera House


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

2 345 visits


Golda Meir Square – Broadway at 39th Street, New York, New York

Golda Meir Square – Broadway at 39th Street, New York, New York
In 1979, the plaza between 39th and 40th Streets on Broadway in midtown Manhattan was officially designated as Golda Meir Memorial Square. This bust of Golda Meir, by Beatrice Goldfine, was dedicated on October 3, 1984. Commissioned by the Jewish Community Relations Council, the bronze bust rests on a pink granite pedestal and measures a total of six and a half feet tall.

Golda Meir (born Golda Mabobitch, 1898-1978, one of the founders of the State of Israel, served as the Minister of Labour, Foreign Minister, and then as the fourth Prime Minister of Israel from March 17, 1969 (at age 70) to June 3, 1974. She is the first (and, to date, only) female Prime Minister of Israel, the third female Prime Minister in the world, and the first female head of state to oversee the development of a nuclear weapons program. She led Israel through the Yom Kippur War and the War or Attrition, and ordered the "Operation Wrath of God" following the Munich massacre at the 1972 Summer Olympic Games.

Golda Meir Square occupies part of the site of the old Metropolitan Opera House. Built in 1883 by Gilded Age businessmen like William Vanderbilt who were denied boxes at the Academy of Music on 14th Street, it soon eclipsed the older venue as the central stage of New York society (as depicted in Edith Wharton’s Custom of the Country). It saw the American debuts of Enrico Caruso (on November 23, 1903), who performed here 861 times, and of Vaslav Nijinsky (on April 12, 1916). In 1966, the beloved opera house was doomed by the Metropolitan Opera company, which insisted, when it moved to Lincoln Center, that the building’s buyer tear it down so that a rival opera company could not use it.

Pano ☼ Rapi ♫✯♫, have particularly liked this photo


Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.