Contact Us

Shopping Cart:

0 items
HOME NEW RELEASES LOCATION Log-in
Search Products
Departments
ART IN-STOCK
Featured Artists
All Artists
Local Artists
Artist Biography
Custom Framing
Photo Restoration
Categories
All Art
African
Animals
Bears
Bison
Bluebonnets
Cats
Cattle
Children
Churches & Religious
City Scenes
Civil War
Classical & Romantic
Colorado
Contemporary
Countryside
Cowboy Church
Cowboys
Cowgirls
Dogs
Eagles
Elk
European
Fantasy
Featured Products
Figurative
Floral
Gift Art
Golf
Historical
Horses
Landscapes
Longhorns
MAPS
Military
Mules
Native American
New Releases
Nostalgia
Oil Field Art
Old West
Patriotic
Portraits
Rural
Sale Items
Seasonal
Southwest
Sporting & Outdoors
Texas Collection
Touch of Art / Miniatures
Vacation Spots
Wagons / Stagecoaches
Western
Wildlife
Wolves
Now In: All Art → The Grand Lady by Rod Chase

Click here to view larger image

Click here to view larger image

The Grand Lady by Rod Chase


 E-mail this product to a friend


The Statue of Liberty was given to the United States by France in 1886. The idea for the gift was conceived at a dinner party in 1865. She was  sculpted by Frederic Bartholdi, and Gustave Eiffel served as the structural engineer. It was fabricated using the Repousse Process and was completed in 1884. The statue was presented to the U.S. on July 4, 1884 and was dismantled and shipped to America in early 1885 on the French frigate "Isere". There were 214 crates holding 350 pieces on the journey across the Atlantic.

Richard Morris Hunt served as architect for the pedestal. The Champion Fundraiser for the Pedestal was Joseph Pulitzer (Hungarian immigrant and Publisher of the New York World), and the Treasurer of The American Committee for the Statue of LIberty was Henry A. Spaulding. The pedestal became the largest 19th Century Concrete Structure in the U.S. weighing 27,000 tons with a volume of 13,300 cubic yards.

On October 28, 1886, President Grover Cleveland officially accepted the Statue saying: "We will not forget that liberty here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected." It is ironic that it was President Cleveland who vetoed funding for the pedestal in 1884, making private fundraising necessary. The Statue of Liberty was designated a National Monument on October 15, 1924.

Initially, visitors could go up the arm to the torch, but the arm was closed to visitors in 1916. On July 30, 1916, during World War I, German saboteurs blew up a cache of dynamite at nearby Black Tom Wharf in New Jersey. The explosion did extensive structural damage to the buildings on Ellis Island, and popped some bolts out of the Statue of Liberty's right arm. Officials closed the monument for about a week. When it re-opened and ever since that time, the arm has been off limits to tourists.

INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE STATUE OF LIBERTY...

Wind speed at which She sways: 3 " at 50 mph; Torch sway is 5" at 50 mph...Number of windows in the crown: 25; number of spikes in the crown: Seven rays of the diadem (7 oceans of the World)...Inscription on the tablet: July 4, 1776 (in Roman numerals)

Height from base to torch: 151' 1"; Height from foundation of pedestal to torch: 305' 1"

Heel to top of head: 111' 1"

Length of hand: 16' 5"; Index finger:8'; Size of fingernail:13" x 10" weighing 3.5 lbs 

Head from chin to cranium: 17' 3"; Head thickness from ear to ear: 10'; Length of nose: 4' 6"

Approximate fabric in Liberty's dress: 4,000 square yards. Bartholdi intentionally clothed Liberty as a classical Roman diety. She wears a "palla", a cloak that is fastened on her left shoulder by a clasp. Underneath is a "stola", which falls in many folds to her feet.

The ships shown in this painting sailed past Liberty in 2000. Many Tall Ships gathered around her at her 100th birthday in July 1986. It was a sight to behold!

  Canvas, Artist Proof
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 30x24
Price: $495.00
  Canvas, Signed and Numbered
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 30x24
Price: $395.00

Quantity:   
  Giclee on Canvas, Artist Proof
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 35x28
Price: $1,250.00
  Giclee on Canvas, Signed and Numbered
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 35x28
Price: $995.00

Quantity:   
  Print, Artist Proof
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 27.5x22
Price: $225.00
  Print, Signed and Numbered
SKU:
Description: <br>
Dimensions: 27.5x22
Price: $195.00

Quantity:   

SilverEagleArt.com© 2008   |  Contact Us  |  Privacy  |  Log-In  |  Powered by SDG | Site Map |