Unconditional Surrender (sculpture)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Unconditional_Surrender_(sculpture) an entity of type: WikicatColossalStatues

Unconditional Surrender is a series of computer-generated statues by Seward Johnson that resemble an iconic 1945 photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt, V–J day in Times Square, but was said by Johnson to be based on a similar, less well-known, photograph by Victor Jorgensen that is in the public domain. The first in the series was installed temporarily in Sarasota, Florida, then was moved to San Diego, California and New York City. Other copies have been installed in Hamilton, New Jersey; Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; and Normandy, France. Johnson later identified the statue at exhibitions as "Embracing Peace" for the risqué double entendre when spoken. rdf:langString
Unconditional Surrender (« capitulation sans condition ») est une série de statues créées par John Seward Johnson II et basées sur une photographie similaire de intitulée Kissing the War Goodbye. Le sujet est un marin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale qui embrasse une infirmière. Sa proximité avec la photographie V-J Day in Times Square d'Alfred Eisenstaedt, soumis au droit d'auteur, posa problème. Une autre version de la statue a été installée sur les abords de la plage de Civitavecchia en Italie. * Kissing the War Goodbye de , photographie proche de celle d'Eisenstaedt. * * rdf:langString
rdf:langString Unconditional Surrender
rdf:langString Unconditional Surrender (sculpture)
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rdf:langString right
rdf:langString An aluminum copy of Unconditional Surrender during the temporary, ten-year display in Sarasota, Florida
rdf:langString The Alfred Eisenstaedt photograph, V–J day in Times Square, that became famous by its 1945 publication in Life
rdf:langString A copyright-free Victor Jorgensen photograph, held in government archives and cited by Seward Johnson as the source for Unconditional Surrender, only extends to just below the knees of the subjects, failing to show the unusual stance of the woman—that is shown fully in the iconic Alfred Eisenstaedt photograph—and that nonetheless, appears in the statues
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rdf:langString Kissing the War Goodbye.jpg
rdf:langString Unconditional Surrender, Saratosa.jpg
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rdf:langString Unconditional Surrender (« capitulation sans condition ») est une série de statues créées par John Seward Johnson II et basées sur une photographie similaire de intitulée Kissing the War Goodbye. Le sujet est un marin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale qui embrasse une infirmière. Sa proximité avec la photographie V-J Day in Times Square d'Alfred Eisenstaedt, soumis au droit d'auteur, posa problème. Une première version était placée à Sarasota (2005-2012, retirée à la suite d'un accident de la route), une deuxième sur le port de San Diego (2007-2012, puis à partir de 2013 à la suite de son remplacement par une version en bronze). et une troisième à Pearl Harbor (depuis 2011). Une autre version de la statue a été installée sur les abords de la plage de Civitavecchia en Italie. * Kissing the War Goodbye de , photographie proche de celle d'Eisenstaedt. * Marina de Civitavecchia en Italie. * Unconditional Surrender exposée à Caen en 2015
rdf:langString Unconditional Surrender is a series of computer-generated statues by Seward Johnson that resemble an iconic 1945 photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt, V–J day in Times Square, but was said by Johnson to be based on a similar, less well-known, photograph by Victor Jorgensen that is in the public domain. The first in the series was installed temporarily in Sarasota, Florida, then was moved to San Diego, California and New York City. Other copies have been installed in Hamilton, New Jersey; Pearl Harbor, Hawaii; and Normandy, France. Johnson later identified the statue at exhibitions as "Embracing Peace" for the risqué double entendre when spoken.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 27516

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