Today (and for the next six months or so), Andy Warhol finds himself immortalized in Union Square Park among some pretty impressive company. Grab lunch at the Greenmarket (on Mon., Wed., Fri. and Sat. only), and gaze upon The Andy Monument. Created by Rob Pruitt, it’s a 10-foot-tall chrome Warhol, and it’s great. I mean, it’s chrome! It’s Warhol circa 1977 in his Levi’s and sport coat, carrying a Polaroid camera and a Bloomingdale’s “medium brown bag.” It is also seeped in allusions, like how he toted around paper bags full of Interview Magazine issues and how the walls of his Factory (which at one point occupied 33 Union Square West) were lined in tin foil. Even if you’re not in the know, The Andy Monument will just make you smile.
As you cross the northern side of the park, look up among the towering trees and you’ll find a bronze Abraham Lincoln, sporting a similar hairstyle to Mr. Warhol’s and standing high on a massive granite pedestal. The Union League commissioned this monument after Lincoln’s assassination, and it’s a very cool example of how American artists like Henry Kirke Brown (the sculptor here) took their classical training and layered on some American realism.
Continuing clockwise around the park there is the Marquis De Lafayette. He was a gift from the French government as a “thank you” to New York for helping Paris during the Franco-Prussian War, and he was fashioned by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi (of Lady Liberty fame).
Probably the most recognizable monument in Union Square is George Washington on horseback. Also by Henry Kirke Brown, this statue is the oldest in the New York City Parks’ collection. Maybe that’s why they keep it featured so prominently on the southern edge of this
always-crowded park. There’s a pretty fantastic view from the 2nd floor café in the Whole Foods across the street, which, by the way, is another good lunch option if it’s not a Greenmarket day.
Thanks to the Square’s long tradition of public protest, the Gandhi Memorial International Foundation dedicated a statue of the man himself (by Kantilal B. Patel). Just like Washington, Lafayette and Lincoln, Gandhi was devoted to defending freedom and civil rights. Thanks to a 2002 renovation, he is forever walking peacefully through Gandhi Gardens on the park’s southwest corner.
Given this rich history, (and there are even a few more monuments sprinkled in!) Mr. Warhol (and Mr. Pruitt) aught to be pretty flattered to be joining the club, if only temporarily. Plus, it’s only day one and there are already calls for the statue to be made permanent. Not bad at all!
Ingredients:
Venues: Union Square Park
Artists: Rob Pruitt; Henry Kirke Brown; Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi; Kantilal B. Patel
Streets: 14th – 17th Sts, Broadway/University Pl – 4th Ave/Park Ave South
Eats: Greenmarket; Whole Foods
Map:
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