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Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

When statues join the joke.

A raised hand, an open book, an empty bench, a serious bronze face. Add one committed passerby, and the monument suddenly gets a role in the scene.

More: Playing With Statues (21 Photos)


🙌 High Five — likely at Biltmore Estate, Asheville, North Carolina 🇺🇸

The timing lands immediately. The setting appears to be the South Terrace at Biltmore Estate, where the raised hand turns the jump into a clean midair high five. Biltmore describes the estate’s outdoor sculpture collection as part of its open-air museum, with many garden figures tied to George Vanderbilt’s late-19th-century collecting in Europe.

💡 Art Nerd Fact: The terrace has its own mythological lineup: Biltmore notes that the South Terrace’s four terra-cotta figures are Faun, Adonis, Venus, and Hamadryad, modeled after works by 17th-century French sculptor Antoine Coysevox. So the “high five” may be interrupting a very old guest list.


📄 Paper Storm — Yamada Taro on Mizushima Shinji Manga Character Street, Niigata 🇯🇵

A statue swings. Papers fly. The batter is Yamada Taro from Shinji Mizushima’s baseball manga Dokaben , one of the bronze characters on Mizushima Shinji Manga Street in Furumachi, Niigata. Tokyo Otaku Mode documented the earlier “Ketsu Bat Girl!” photo trend around this same statue; this office-papers version turns the pose into a tiny action scene.

💡 Manga Fact: The street is often nicknamed “Dokaben Road,” but Niigata Repo points out that only four of its seven bronze characters are from Dokaben ; the rest come from other Shinji Mizushima baseball manga. It feels like a small hall of fame for one artist’s baseball universe.


📖 Story Time With Hans — Hans Christian Andersen Statue in Central Park, New York City 🇺🇸

This one is quieter. At Conservatory Water in Central Park, Georg Lober’s 1956 bronze shows Hans Christian Andersen reading The Ugly Duckling to a duckling. The visitors lean into the open book, and the scene becomes exactly what the Central Park Conservancy describes: a child-friendly storytelling spot.

💡 Story Fact: That tradition goes back almost to the beginning: the Central Park Conservancy says children’s storytelling has been held here since 1957, one year after the monument was unveiled.


🥤 Bench Chat With a Bronze Stranger

No big stunt here: just a drink, a snack, and the perfect empty space beside a statue that already looks ready to listen.


🤳 Founding Fathers Selfie — Signers’ Hall at the National Constitution Center, Philadelphia 🇺🇸

Put a phone in bronze Benjamin Franklin’s hand and history looks very online. At Signers’ Hall inside the National Constitution Center, visitors can walk among 42 life-size bronze figures of the Constitution’s framers and dissenters, so the setup really does read like a group photo — just more than two centuries late. The Center’s FAQ credits the statues to artists at Studio EIS in Brooklyn.

💡 History Fact: Signers’ Hall is not just a signer lineup: it also includes the three delegates who refused to sign — George Mason, Elbridge Gerry, and Edmund Randolph — because the museum stages the final day of the Convention, debate and all. The National Constitution Center has a whole note on those dissenters.


👶 When Statues Become Fathers — Arena Idé’s #Kvantitetstidspappan Campaign in Sweden 🇸🇪

A baby sling changes the whole read of a stern historical statue. Arena Idé’s #kvantitetstidspappan campaign dressed male statues across Sweden in baby slings and carriers on International Men’s Day to spotlight unequal parenting and push employers to do more. It gets a laugh first, then points to the serious part: who is expected to do the caring.

💡 Equality Fact: The stunt was built around a very specific number: Arena Idé says Swedish fathers were taking only 30.9% of parental-benefit days and 38% of VAB, Sweden’s care-of-sick-child days. The baby carriers turned stone-and-bronze “great men” into a public data visualization.

More: When Statues Become Fathers


📚 Getting a Second Opinion — Gabriele D’Annunzio Statue in Trieste, Italy 🇮🇹

Two visitors lean in, and a solitary reader becomes a group project. The statue is Alessandro Verdi’s 2019 bronze of Gabriele D’Annunzio in Piazza della Borsa, Trieste. It is a tiny move, but the mood shifts from solo study to urgent research meeting.

💡 History Fact: This bookish pose carries heavier history than it first seems: the statue was unveiled in 2019, and ANSA reported that Croatia condemned the inauguration because it happened on the 100th anniversary of D’Annunzio’s 1919 occupation of Fiume/Rijeka. One quiet reader, a lot of history.


😮 A Close Encounter in Davis — Yin & Yang Egghead at UC Davis, California 🇺🇸

The sculpture is already odd. The pose gives it one more job: catching a visitor in its mouth. This is part of Robert Arneson’s Yin & Yang from the UC Davis Eggheads series at Wright Hall. Simple, strange, and hard to forget.

💡 Egghead Fact: This Davis oddball had a city twin: UC Davis reported that reproductions of Yin & Yang were cast from Arneson’s original molds for San Francisco’s Embarcadero, and the Eggheads site notes that the edition was later removed in 2013.


Which one is your favorite?