The iconic monumental statue of Joan of Arc is located on Riverside Drive at 93rd Street in the Upper Westside in New York City. When entering through to the east of Riverside Drive walking up the stairs you’re welcome with the view of the posterior of the statue. To be more precise the first that stand out is the horse’s imposing rear with muscular legs. The monument statue is surrounded with trees.
Once you’re in front of this beautiful monument of Joan of Arc you appreciate it is elegance and simplicity.
In the monument you have Joan and the horse facing west to the Riverside Drive. Joan is standing up on the horse while looking up to the sky. She is holding a sword in her right hand and the horse’s reins with her left hand. Her posture not only coveys confidence, but also shows devoutness. She wearing what appears to be armor used in medieval battle including the protective head armor.
The powerful horse is leaping forward with authority as his companion, Joan. Marching and galloping is the horse toward the viewer. Fascinating is seeing the muscles on the ho...
The book, Beyond The Myth: The Story of Joan of Arc, by Polly Schoyer Brooks, is a biography.
"Marble Statue of a Wounded Amazon." Metropolitan Museum of Art. N.p., n.d. Web. 7 Dec. 2013. .
“Joan of Arc,” was painted by the French realist artist Jules Bastien-Lepage in 1879. “After the province of Lorraine was lost to Germany following the Franco-Prussian War in 1821, The Frenchmen saw in Joan of Arc a new and powerful symbol. In 1875, Bastien-Lepage, a native of Lorraine began to make studies for a picture of her. In the present painting, exhibited in the Salon of 1880, Joan is shown receiving her revelation in her parents garden. Behind her are Saints Michael, Margaret, and Catherine. (Caption next to painting in The Metropolitan)”
Jehanne d’Arc or more commonly known as Joan of Arc nicknamed the Maid of Orleans is a brave heroine who is known for her work during the Hundred Years War. With her defeat at her last battle, Joan ends the Hundred Years War and years later gets declared a saint for her bravery and sacrifice. Throughout her life, she struggled with an education and growing up on a farm. Later in those years she beings to hears voices and sees visions believing it to be from the Heavens and joins the French war because of it. Only being a teenager through all this, at the age of 19 she’s gets betrayed by who she thinks is an ally and burnt at the stake for charges.
This statue is the result of the sculptor, Richard Rahl, being kidnapped and forced into bondage in a land ruled by a despotic religious order. This order’s teachings insisted humanity was in a state of sin from birth, unworthy of the light and love of their Creator. This sin was greed. To labor for one’s own survival was to show hatred of your neighbor through greed thus leading to slavery in all but name. Art in this land was deemed vile if it showed humanity in any other light than decrepit and twisted, cringing from their Creator and its light.
Joan of Arc was burned at the stake because she claimed to have communicated directly with God, an act of heresy against the Roman Catholic Church. In the painting, she is shown looking up towards the heavens in direct defiance of those punishing her for her belief. In her moments before death she is not crying or screaming but looks to be praying, maybe even hearing the voice of God in that moment. The crowd is in shadow, the sky is dark except a break in the clouds above her, showing a white fluffy cloud and a blue sky. She stands out brightly against the rest of the painting, wearing all white and cream, like an angel. Like Montag, her enlightenment is the root of her
In 1455 Joan’s family asked for another trial to reconsider Joan’s charges and a year later she was announced innocent (Schmalz). In 1920, Joan was canonized as a saint (“Joan of Arc”). Joan’s many contributions have made a huge impact on our history. It is impossible to know what the western world would be like today without Joan’s immense influence during the Hundred Years’ War. Even though she was a woman and acted in a different position than tradition dictated, Joan of Arc impacted the Hundred Years’ War immensely, influencing significant strategic wins more than any other warrior, and turning the tide of the war from an English victory to a French triumph.
Joan of Arc, a well-known Catholic saint and French national heroine, is a figure worthy of historical attention. Born in Domremy, France, sometime around 1412, Joan lived as a peasant with her family on fifty acres of land. At the end of her short life of nineteen years, Joan revealed in a trial that her rise to power in the Anglo-French conflict was due to a series of visions she had as a young girl. These visions, which were religious in nature, helped Joan to turn the Hundred Years War into a religious conflict. Despite her efforts to turn the tide of the war and helping to win a pivotal battle in Orleans, Joan was captured and put on trial for heresy. After a trial that lasted for months, Joan was officially labeled a heretic and burned at the stake in 1431. It would only be centuries later that Joan would gain sainthood in the Catholic church and become formally recognized as a woman of power, even centuries after her death. Joan of Arc’s life can be examined in three distinct parts: her early life’s revelations of religious visions, her entrance into the Hundred Years War as a leader of the French army, and her death as a heretic and eventual entrance to sainthood. The combination of these events convinces observers that Joan was a woman of power ahead of her time, and in each part of her life, Joan took on a role normally expected of men. Joan of Arc thus was a major contributing catalyst for feminist action, serving as a visionary, military hero, and eventual martyr.
Denis, Leon. The Mystery of Joan of Arc. Trans. A. C. Doyle. New York: E. P. Dutton &
The Statue of Liberty or by it’s other name Liberty Enlightening the World is one of the most iconic objects in the known world as well as being the most noticeable and iconic structure in our country. This object, like I said prior is U.S.A’s symbol of Freedom. Lady Liberty (as many refer to her) is so amazing in mass amounts of ways. The statue is a great representation of the friendship between France and the USA back in the day. Over the years, the Statue of Liberty's symbolism has grown to include freedom and democracy as well as this international friendship.
During the Middle Ages of Europe there was a great war between France and England known as the 100 year War. Throughout this war there were many historic battles and many warriors that have had stories told about them over the years. None more famous than a young girl from a small village named Joan of Arc. Joan of Arc lived a short life, but did so much that she has many songs, stories, and even today movies made about her. If there was one person that deserved to have stories told about them, Joan of Arc is that person deserving.
Joan of Arc Christopher Reeve once said “A hero is an ordinary individual who finds the strength to persevere and endure in spite of overwhelming obstacles.” Joan of Arc was a hero, because she was an ordinary girl who took down obstacles to be able to fight for France. Joan was a peasant girl, and in the eyes of men, she had little to no power. Men were declared superior, and women were declared inferior. Joan faced many struggles because of her gender and social class in the world of Medieval Europe.
Joan of Arc showed her caring nature at a young age and this helped her strong influence over the culture of her time. Joan
Joan of Arc was an amazing girl with lots of courage and lots of bravery. She fought in what seemed to be an everlasting war with more bravery than most of the men of her time. She never gave up and she never surrendered to the enemy. Her life was one filled with hard fought battles and risky adventures. She risked everything to do what God summoned her to do. Her story is one that proves that Joan of Arc, over all others, is truly the best heroine of all times.