Statues & Monuments
Some sizes / formats are available now and ship immediately; others require up to three weeks to begin shipping.
Shipping and Handling is included in the purchase price. All sizes / formats are professionally printed.
Some sizes / formats are available now and ship immediately; others require up to three weeks to begin shipping.
Shipping and Handling is included in the purchase price. All sizes / formats are professionally printed.
Columns for the Canal
Originally designed by Bernard Maybeck for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in 1915 and built out of plaster and burlap fiber, the Palace of Fine Arts still stands as one of the few remnants of the fair.
Photograph was taken in San Francisco, California, USA. |
The People's Elbow
Liberty Enlightening the World was given to the United States by the people of France in 1886. Sculpted by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, the iconic statue welcomes all into New York Harbor.
Photograph was taken in New York City, New York, USA. |
White Light of Liberty
Liberty Enlightening the World was given to the United States by the people of France in 1886. Sculpted by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, the iconic statue welcomes all into New York Harbor.
Photograph was taken in New York City, New York, USA. |
Moonument
The famed Washington Monument in Washington, DC points out a faint morning moon just above the tip. What better way to indicate Earth's lofty natural satellite than the world's tallest obelisk?
Photograph was taken in Washington, DC, USA. |
Ask For Me Tomorrow
The stately Delger tomb on Millionaire's Row in Oakland California's Mountain View Cemetery. The Cemetery was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and houses the remains of famous figures and ordinary people.
Photograph was taken in Oakland, California, USA. |
Guardian of the OEOB
A unique angle to view the monument commemorating the First Division of the American Expeditionary Force in World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and Operation Desert Storm. This statue is called "Winged Victory," and was designed by Daniel Chester French in 1924. It is gold plated bronze, and sits 65 feet above the street atop a column of pink Massachusetts granite. The statue is located near the White House in front of the Old Executive Office Building (which is a classy piece of architecture itself, if you ever get the chance to take some quality admiration time).
Photograph was taken in Washington, DC, USA. |
Of By For
In just over two minutes, Abraham Lincoln delivered these immortal words, which now greet visitors to his memorial engraved into the wall. This photograph is a close-up of the engraving at the Lincoln Memorial.
Photograph was taken in Washington, DC, USA. |
King of the Olive Groves
At the top of an adorable little hill, in the town of Vinci (near which, Leonardo da Vinci was born in 1452), this sculpture stands sentinel just outside the Museo Leonardiano, which houses miniature replicas of some of the inventions drawn in Leonardo's notebooks.
The sculpture is a 3-dimensional rendition of one of da Vinci's most famous illustrations, The Vitruvian Man. Vinci is surrounded by olive groves and vineyards. Photograph was taken in Vinci, Tuscany, Italy. |
Glow in the d'Arc
A replica of the original sculpted by Emmanuel Frémiet in 1880, this 1924 statue of Joan of Arc, and its sister statues in Philadelphia and Paris, were gilded to the almost painfully brilliant sheen you see today. With just the right light combined with metallic paper, this Joan is simultaneously gold and silver, solid and liquid, strong and fragile.
Photograph was taken in Portland, Oregon, USA. |
Uffeetzi
On the Piazza della Signoria, at the corner adjoining the Uffizi Gallery, you will find the Loggia dei Lanzi, which houses many fascinating works of sculptural art in the open air. One of this pieces is "The Rape of Polyxena" by Pio Fedi. This photograph is a close up of one small part of said statue.
Photograph was taken in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. |
Unscrewed
At the foot of the double staircase of the Senatorial Palace in the Piazza Campidoglio in Rome, there are two statues representing the Nile and the Tiber rivers. This photograph is a close-up of the hand of one of these statues.
Photograph was taken in Rome, Lazio, Italy. |
Equinox
A beam of light shining on the wall of the great Pantheon in Rome. The Pantheon (meaning "Temple of all the gods") was built to honor the gods, and is a well-preserved building for its age. A single opening in the ceiling, the oculus, is the lone source of light for the great temple.
Photograph was taken in Rome, Lazio, Italy. |
Stone Dentist
A close-up of a headstone in the Granary Burial Ground, Boston's 3rd oldest cemetery (founded in 1660). The cemetery contains such American Revolutionary notables as Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, and John Hancock.
I found this headstone particularly interesting because of the missing tooth. The tooth did not fall out by virtue of age, though it is an old headstone. The tooth was carved as missing. Photograph was taken in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. |

















