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Bronze statue of a Kabyle girl with colourful headscarf in Parc de Bercy in the 12th arrondissement.
Kahina the Kabyle girl is one of 21 statues created by Rachid Khimoune under the concept of Les Enfants du Monde (Children of the World). The statues have been installed in Parc de Bercy in 2001. The statues have been installed in Parc de Bercy in 2001. The statues are made from re-used industrial metal items with different textures welded together.
Kahina wears a long dress with a wavey pattern. Around her shoulders is a small lacy scarf with intergrate patterns.
Her cuffs are patterned.
Her headscarf is coloured green, blue and brown with patterns.
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- Parent Category: Statues Paris
The lion sits down with his tail relaxed at his right side. He suppresses an arrow with his paws on place Denfert-Rochereau in the 15th arrondissement.
The dark bronze statue of the Belfort lion by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi (1880) is a smaller copy of the red sandstone lion at Belfort. The original is an amazing 22m by 11m and was dedicated to the people of the town of Belfort who were under a 103 day siege during the Prussian War (December 1870 - February 1871). Under Colonel Denfert-Rochereau, an army of ~3500 and ~14000 civilians held out against 40000 Prussians.
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- Parent Category: Statues Paris
This bronze statue of a lion and his prey by Auguste Cain (1870) is placed in Jardin du Luxembourg.
The turquoise tinted lion stands proudly over his prey - an ostrich.
It was the fashion at that period for sculptures to depict animals in a situation perceived to be their natural way of living.
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- Parent Category: Statues Paris
The stone figure of London is above the second plinth from the right outside Gare du Nord.
The figure of London by Jean-Louis-Nicolas Jaley (1865) is one of the eight larger statues on the cornice line of Gare du Nord, representing international destinations reached from Paris by this railway (at that time) as well as Paris.
They are from left to right:
Frankfurt
Amsterdam
Warsaw
Brussels
Paris
Berlin
Cologne
London
Vienne
London wears a long gown gathered on the right shoulder and a crown. She leans on a large shield with her right hand. Her left wrist touches her left hip. In the hand she holds a downward facing medical symbol with two serpents.
