Robert Burns The sculpture in London in 2006
Artist John Steell Type Sculpture Medium Bronze Subject Robert Burns Location Dundee, Dunedin, London, New York City
Robert Burns is a bronze portrait statue of Robert Burns by John Steell. Four versions exist, in New York City (United States), Dundee (Scotland), London (England), and Dunedin (New Zealand).
New York statue
The statue in New York
The memorial sculpture in Manhattan 's Central Park was cast c. 1880 and dedicated on 2 October 1880.[ 1] [ 2] It was the first statue of Burns to be erected outside Scotland and was a gift to the City of New York from Saint Andrew's Society of the State of New York and the Scottish-American community. For this sculpture Steell closely followed the portrait of Burns painted by Alexander Nasmyth in 1787. Seated on a tree stump with a quill pen in one hand, Burns looks up to heaven. He is thinking of his true love Mary Campbell, who died at an early age. It was to her that he had written the poem "To Mary in Heaven" inscribed on the scroll at his feet.
The statue is located at 40°46′12.5″N 73°58′21.0″W / 40.770139°N 73.972500°W / 40.770139; -73.972500 .
The Scottish and English statues
The statues in Dundee and London
The Dundee statue was unveiled only two weeks after the one in New York in 1880 and the third cast was erected on the Thames Embankment in London in 1884. The Dundee statue is located at 56°27′44.5″N 02°58′19.0″W / 56.462361°N 2.971944°W / 56.462361; -2.971944 and the London statue is located at 51°30′30.5″N 00°07′18.5″W / 51.508472°N 0.121806°W / 51.508472; -0.121806 .
Dunedin statue
The statue in Dunedin
The Dunedin statue was the last of the set to be unveiled, on 24 May 1887.[ 3] A statue of Burns was deemed relevant to the city, both because of the city's Scottish roots (it was founded by the Free Church of Scotland in 1848), and also because one of the city's founding fathers was Rev. Thomas Burns, a nephew of the poet.
In likeness, it is closest to the London statue. There had been discussion whether to place the statue in front of the railway station , but an elevated placement in The Octagon, the central plaza of Dunedin, was eventually chosen.[ 4] The statue was unveiled by Miss Burns, a great-grand niece of Robert Burns. Speeches were given by former Governor and Premier of New Zealand Sir George Grey , and Richard Henry Leary, the Mayor of Dunedin.[ 3] Cyril Croker, a solicitor who spent his teenage years in Dunedin, would say of the statue that:[ 5]
It was situated between the Cathedral and two hotels, and, true to his reputation, Burns had his back to the Cathedral, and his face to the pub.
Because of its placement on what is now known as the McMillan terrace, the statue is the backdrop to many public speeches. On 27 July 1988, the statue was registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust as a Category I heritage structure with reference number 2208.[ 4] The statue is located at 45°52′26.5″S 170°30′11.5″E / 45.874028°S 170.503194°E / -45.874028; 170.503194 .
See also
List of Robert Burns memorials
List of sculptures in Central Park
References
External links
Poems Books Places Family
Jean Armour (wife)
Robert Burns Junior (son)
Francis Wallace Burns (son)
William Nicol Burns (son)
Elizabeth 'Betty' Burns (natural daughter)
James Glencairn Burns (son)
Agnes Broun (mother)
William Burnes (father)
Gilbert Burns (brother)
Agnes Burns (sister)
Annabella Burns (sister)
William Burns (brother)
John Burns (brother)
Isabella Burns (sister)
Adam Armour (brother-in-law)
James Armour (father-in-law)
Robert Burnes (uncle)
People
Robert Aiken
Robert Ainslie
John Anderson
John Bacon (landlord)
John Ballantine
Alison Begbie
Thomas Blacklock
Nelly Blair
Richard Brown
May Cameron
Mary Campbell
Margaret Chalmers
Jenny Clow
Alison Cockburn
Alexander Cunningham (lawyer)
Lord Glencairn
Frances Dunlop
Robert Fergusson
Alexander Findlater
Jean Gardner
Jean Glover
Robert Graham of Fintry
Gavin Hamilton
Helen Hyslop
Nelly Kilpatrick
John Lewars
Janet Little
Jean Lorimer (Chloris)
James McKie
John MacKenzie
Agnes Maclehose
John McMurdo
William Maxwell
John Murdoch
William Nicol
Anna Park
Elizabeth Paton
John Richmond
James Smith
David Sillar
John Syme
Alexander Tait
Robert Tannahill
Peggy Thompson
Edward Whigham
Related
Glenriddell Manuscripts
Bachelors' Club, Tarbolton
Burns clubs
Robert Burns World Federation
Bust of Robert Burns
Irvine
Atlanta
Burns supper
Memorials
Kilmarnock
Robert Burns's Commonplace Book 1783–1785
Robert Burns's Interleaved Scots Musical Museum
Montreal
Barre
Albany
Boston
Fredericton
Robert Burns (Stevenson)
Robert Burns (Steell)
Poems and Songs by Alexander Tait
Robert Burns's diamond point engravings
Robert Burns and the Eglinton Estate
Robert Burns Humanitarian Award
The Loves of Robert Burns (1930 film)
The Marriage of Robin Redbreast and the Wren
The Merry Muses of Caledonia
The Poetical Works of Janet Little, The Scotch Milkmaid
A Manual of Religious Belief
Sculptures and public art
107th Infantry Memorial
Alice in Wonderland sculpture
Angel of the Waters
Balto
Simón Bolívar
Burnett Memorial Fountain
Robert Burns
City Employees War Memorial
Christopher Columbus
Cleopatra's Needle
Delacorte Clock
Duke Ellington Memorial
Frederick Douglass Memorial
Eagles and Prey
The Falconer
Fitz-Greene Halleck
Alexander Hamilton
Victor Herbert
Indian Hunter
King Jagiello Monument
José Martí
Giuseppe Mazzini
Samuel Finley Breese Morse
The Pilgrim
Romeo and Juliet
José de San Martín
Sir Walter Scott
Seventh Regiment Memorial
William Shakespeare
J. Marion Sims (moved 2018)
The Gates (temporary, 2005)
The Tempest
Untermyer Fountain
USS Maine National Monument
Daniel Webster
Women's Rights Pioneers Monument
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Land art See also
By location
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Victoria
Victoria Embankment3
Westminster
Whitehall
1 Partly in Kensington and Chelsea
2 Partly in Camden
3 Partly in the City of London
Key : † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London) ·
‡ Changing displays
Public art and memorials in Manhattan
Portrait sculpture
José Bonifácio de Andrada
Susan B. Anthony
Chester A. Arthur
Balto
Simón Bolívar
Robert Burns
William Cullen Bryant
El Cid
George M. Cohan
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Roscoe Conkling
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Frederick Douglass
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Other monuments Fountains
Bethesda Fountain
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Josephine Shaw Lowell Memorial Fountain
Madison Square Park Fountain
Peace Fountain
Pulitzer Fountain
Triumph of the Human Spirit
Union Square Drinking Fountain
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Other works Damaged/destroyed in 9/11
Related Key : † No longer extant or on public display