Madhattan. LbNA #63352 (ARCHIVED)
Owner: | The Lost Boys |
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Plant date: | Sep 6, 2012 |
Location: | Central Park |
City: | New York |
County: | New York |
State: | New York |
Boxes: | 1 |
Found by: | Christina Chiappetta |
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Last found: | Feb 28, 2016 |
Status: | FFFFFaFFFFFFFFFFFFFr |
Last edited: | Dec 6, 2015 |
Twinkle, twinkle, little hat!
How I wonder what you're at!
Off my head you seemed to fly,
Like a tea tray in the sky.
Twinkle, twinkle, little hat!
How I wonder what you're at!
Located just north of the Conservatory Water at East 74th Street, Alice in Wonderland stands eleven feet tall in bronze, surrounded by the Mad Hatter, the White Rabbit and a few of her other friends.
The sculpture was constructed in 1959 by José de Creeft under the commission of philanthropist George Delacorte so that children could visit and experience the wonder of Lewis Carroll's classic story. Atypical of most sculptures, children are invited to climb, touch and crawl all over Alice and her friends. In fact, through the decades thousands of hands and feet have literally polished parts of the statue's surface smooth. The design for the bronze sculpture was patterned off the original illustrations of John Tenniel that were used in the first published edition of the book. The obvious centerpiece of the work, Alice, who depicts the face of Creeft's daughter, Donna, is pictured sitting on a giant mushroom reaching toward a pocket watch held by the White Rabbit. Peering over her shoulder is the Cheshire Cat, surrounded by the Dormouse, Alice's cat Dinah, and the Mad Hatter -- a caricature of George Delacorte.
19 diagonal steps behind the Mad Hatter.
Two walls intersect at a 90 ° angle. Have a seat.
Reach down to your right. Under a stone, a mad hatter's hat.
There's a little "nook" in the wall where the container is. Please try to put it back there, to minimize it being seen or lost. Please re-cover with the stone.
How I wonder what you're at!
Off my head you seemed to fly,
Like a tea tray in the sky.
Twinkle, twinkle, little hat!
How I wonder what you're at!
Located just north of the Conservatory Water at East 74th Street, Alice in Wonderland stands eleven feet tall in bronze, surrounded by the Mad Hatter, the White Rabbit and a few of her other friends.
The sculpture was constructed in 1959 by José de Creeft under the commission of philanthropist George Delacorte so that children could visit and experience the wonder of Lewis Carroll's classic story. Atypical of most sculptures, children are invited to climb, touch and crawl all over Alice and her friends. In fact, through the decades thousands of hands and feet have literally polished parts of the statue's surface smooth. The design for the bronze sculpture was patterned off the original illustrations of John Tenniel that were used in the first published edition of the book. The obvious centerpiece of the work, Alice, who depicts the face of Creeft's daughter, Donna, is pictured sitting on a giant mushroom reaching toward a pocket watch held by the White Rabbit. Peering over her shoulder is the Cheshire Cat, surrounded by the Dormouse, Alice's cat Dinah, and the Mad Hatter -- a caricature of George Delacorte.
19 diagonal steps behind the Mad Hatter.
Two walls intersect at a 90 ° angle. Have a seat.
Reach down to your right. Under a stone, a mad hatter's hat.
There's a little "nook" in the wall where the container is. Please try to put it back there, to minimize it being seen or lost. Please re-cover with the stone.