And the group Chopin Monument in Chicago plans to do just that, with a replica of sculptor Waclaw Szymanowski's Warsaw original, designed in 1907, cast and erected in 1926, destroyed by the Nazi's in 1940, and recast in 1958. A full size replica already exists in Hamamatsu, Japan.
Apparently the project is already pretty far along, pretty much under the radar. If you run, you can still catch the Grant Park Advisory's meeting on the proposed monument, starting at 7:00 tonight, Tuesday, February 8th, at Daley Bicentennial Plaza, 337 East Randolph. (If you attend, send me a report and I'll pass the information on.)
No doubt about it; this thing is huge:
click image for larger view
Not to be churlish, but is this really a good idea?
I suppose if it gets built, it won't be a tragedy, but why is a handsome memorial to Daniel Burnham, designed by Chicago architect David Woodhouse, unacceptable, and this huge lump A-ok?
A monument to Chopin is a great idea, but isn't Chicago a world-class city, at the front rank of the global arts scene? And, if we are, for Chopin and for Chicago, is this overscaled copy of a copy of a century-old design really the best we can do?
4 comments:
Sounds like a monument for a third-tier city.
And, really, if we're going to start building copies of things, why not the Lincoln Memorial?
I want a copy of the Eiffel Tower here - to honor the French. And a copy of the Taj Mahal (reduced in scale) - to honor those from India. And a copy of some Roman ruins - to honor the Italians. Instead of wasting money on a cheap (but expensive) copy, how about supporting music education int his city. Buy tickets to live performances. Pay for a kid's music lessons. Make something real instead of destroying park land on this foolishness.
and I want a copy of the Leaning Tower to honor the Italians. (oh wait, we've already got one.)
unfortunately, it's much harder to inscribe a dedication on a kid than on a statue or a building.
I hope there are kids who know who Chopin is (beyond the fact that he was Polish - big deal!) in 100 years.
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