The Falconer (Simonds)
40°46′26.8″N 73°58′25.7″W / 40.774111°N 73.973806°W
The Falconer | |
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Artist | George Blackall Simonds |
Year | 1871 (installed 1875) |
Location | Central Park, New York City |
The Falconer is a bronze sculpture in Central Park, New York City by English sculptor George Blackall Simonds. It depicts a man in a theatrical version of Elizabethan dress standing on a high granite pedestal, releasing a hunting falcon.[1]
The Falconer, cast in 1871 in Florence, was erected in 1875[2] on a prominent rock overlooking the confluence of Terrace Drive and another carriage drive near the West 72nd Street drive entrance. The growth of surrounding trees has partly obscured the site. The sculpture has a history of being vandalized. The original falcon was stolen, and in the 1960s the New York City Parks Department commissioned their employee and sculptor, Joel Rudnick, to mold a new falcon which now sits on The Falconer's arm. This new falcon is substantially different from the original falcon. The arm itself was also re-fashioned by Parks' employee Domenico Facci.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Falconer". Central Park Conservatory. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
- ^ NYC Dept of Parks: The Falconer; "1872" in Michele H. Bogart, Public Sculpture and the Civic Ideal in New York City, 1890–1930 1989:19.
External links
[edit]- 1871 sculptures
- Sculptures by George Blackall Simonds
- Sculptures of birds in New York (state)
- Bronze sculptures in Central Park
- Sculptures in Central Park
- Statues in New York City
- Sculptures of men in New York City
- Vandalized works of art in New York City
- 1875 establishments in New York (state)
- Animal sculptures in New York City
- New York (state) sculpture stubs