Triumph of the Human Spirit is a 2000 black granite sculpture by , installed at Manhattan's Foley Square, in the U.S. state of New York. According to the City of New York, the 50-foot (15 m), 300-ton, abstract monument is derived from the female antelope Chiwara forms of Bambaran art. The sculpture is sited near a rediscovered Colonial-era African Burial Ground, and its support structure alludes to the slave trade's Middle Passage. The work was commissioned by the New York City Government program Percent for Art.
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| - Triumph of the Human Spirit (en)
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| - Triumph of the Human Spirit is a 2000 black granite sculpture by , installed at Manhattan's Foley Square, in the U.S. state of New York. According to the City of New York, the 50-foot (15 m), 300-ton, abstract monument is derived from the female antelope Chiwara forms of Bambaran art. The sculpture is sited near a rediscovered Colonial-era African Burial Ground, and its support structure alludes to the slave trade's Middle Passage. The work was commissioned by the New York City Government program Percent for Art. (en)
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| - Triumph of the Human Spirit (en)
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| - The sculpture at Foley Square in 2008 (en)
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| - New York City, New York, United States (en)
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| - Triumph of the Human Spirit (en)
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| - Triumph of the Human Spirit is a 2000 black granite sculpture by , installed at Manhattan's Foley Square, in the U.S. state of New York. According to the City of New York, the 50-foot (15 m), 300-ton, abstract monument is derived from the female antelope Chiwara forms of Bambaran art. The sculpture is sited near a rediscovered Colonial-era African Burial Ground, and its support structure alludes to the slave trade's Middle Passage. The work was commissioned by the New York City Government program Percent for Art. (en)
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