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The Botanist Kirribilli

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The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
The Botanist Kirribilli
Phone:
+61 2 9954 4057

Hours:
Sunday12pm - 10pm
Monday4pm - 11pm
Tuesday4pm - 11pm
Wednesday12pm - 12am
Thursday12pm - 12am
Friday12pm - 12am
Saturday12pm - 12am


Public art in the City of Sydney in New South Wales, Australia includes a wide range of works across a range of genres and for a range of purposes or combination of purposes. Some are purely artistic, some are commemorative, some are both. Some are monuments or memorials; some are also fountains and some are site-specific and in some buildings, such as Australia Square and Grosvenor Place by Harry Seidler and Aurora Place by Renzo Piano, the art is a component of the architect's intentions. The City of Sydney has a Public Art Policy. Conservation work is carried on from time to time to maintain the works.The materials used vary widely but include traditional marble and bronze as well as steel , concrete and newer materials like aluminium . In the 21st century, kinetic, musical, and conceptual works began to appear. Notable sculptors from around the world are represented in works on public display in Sydney. For example, Bertram Mackennal and Bronwyn Oliver were Australian; Gilbert Bayes and Henry Moore were British; François-Léon Sicard and Henri Alfred Jacquemart were French; Alexander Calder and Jenny Holzer are American; Kan Yasuda and Jun'ya Ishigami are Japanese. Some memorials are in the form of a fountain; others are in the form of a portrait statue. The Lawson Memorial commemorates a writer; John Christie Wright Memorial Fountain commemorates a sculptor; the Dobell Memorial commemorates a painter, the Morshead Fountain commemorates a soldier; Il Porcellino commemorates surgeons. As well as memorials to individuals or groups, matters of importance to Sydney such as navigation and the environment are also commemorated. The bronze portraits of James Cook, Arthur Phillip and Matthew Flinders also pay tribute to their skills in exploration and navigation. Recurring themes include flora, children and classical or abstract allusion. Local flora is represented by sculptures such as Veil of Trees, Edge of the Trees and Into the Trees II. Busby's Bore takes water as its subject; indigenous fauna is interpreted in Dancing Brolgas and domesticated animals in Trim, Islay and Mare and Foal. The lives and importance of children are acknowledged in the Tank Stream Fountain, Windlines, Youngsters and the memorial to Hans Christian Andersen. Some employ classical references to convey an abstract meaning; others use abstracted forms to convey an idea.
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