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Gay Liberation Monument facts for kids

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Gay Liberation
Christopher Park entrance.jpg
The memorial as seen from one of the park's entrances
Artist George Segal
Year 1980 (1980)
Type Sculpture
Medium Bronze
Location New York City; Stanford, California
Coordinates 40°44′01″N 74°00′09″W / 40.73359°N 74.00243°W / 40.73359; -74.00243

The Gay Liberation Monument is a monument featuring the sculpture Gay Liberation by American artist George Segal, located in Christopher Park along Christopher Street in the West Village section of Manhattan, New York. Located at the northern end of the park, the art installation commemorates the Stonewall riots and features four figures (two standing men and two seated women) positioned in "natural, easy" poses. The bronze statues are covered in white lacquer, cast in 1980 from plaster moulds of human models. Two "World's Fair-style" benches and a plaque are also part of the monument. The monument was dedicated on June 23, 1992, and is part of the Stonewall National Monument.

The sculpture was originally commissioned in 1979 (10th anniversary of the Stonewall incident) by the Cleveland-based Mildred Andrews Fund. The commission specified that the work must be installed on public land and that it "had to be loving and caring, and show the affection that is the hallmark of gay people. . . . And it had to have equal representation of men and women." It was completed in 1980 and was the first piece of public art dedicated to LGBT rights. It was intended for installation in New York but proved too controversial for the city. It was instead installed in Orton Park in Madison, Wisconsin from 1986 to 1991. The Madison installation was funded by the New Harvest Foundation. It was finally moved to New York in 1992. After it was moved to New York, one of the Stonewall veterans, Marsha P. Johnson, commented, "How many people have died for these two little statues to be put in the park to recognize gay people? How many years does it take for people to realize we're all brothers and sisters in the human race? We're all in this rat race together."

In August 2015, anonymous activists painted two of the figures' faces brown to protest the way the statues "white- and cis-wash a movement led by black and brown queer and trans people".

Stanford University

George Segal was visiting Stanford University’s Gay People’s Union (GPU) on a social night on the upper floor of the Old Fire House. George had just come from the meeting where San Francisco’s Arts Commission had just rejected the second casting statue, as later did Los Angeles, and George was wondering what to do with it. GPU member, Mike Brady, told George “We’ll take it. Lets make arrangements with the University.” GPU was an early pioneering LGBTQ student organization. In 1984 it was installed on Stanford University's Main Quad as a "long term loan". The sculpture was vandalized several times during the first ten years, but eventually became an accepted part of Stanford's public art.

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See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Monumento a la Liberación Gay para niños

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