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Hecuba_(statue) Latitude and Longitude:

34°01′30″N 118°17′05″W / 34.025092°N 118.284735°W / 34.025092; -118.284735
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hecuba statue, a bronze sculpture located in the central piaza of USC Village at the University of Southern California. The statue honors Hecuba, the queen of Troy who was married to King Priam during the Trojan War. Designed to serve as a female counterpart [1] [2] [3] to the iconic Tommy Trojan statue, the Hecuba statue symbolizes gender equality at USC and represents the diverse community of USC students, faculty, and alumni.

History

The statue was designed by Christopher Slatoff, who also created the statue of judge Robert Maclay Widney, the university's founder, that stands in front of the Widney Alumni House on the south side of campus. The statue was unveiled on August 17, 2017, as the centerpiece of USC Village, a $700 million Gothic Revival-style mixed-use expansion of the USC campus.[ citation needed]

Features and symbolism

The Hecuba statue stands 12 feet tall, rising atop a pedestal that measures 9 feet tall, Hecuba is depicted extending her arm in an appeal to the USC community. The entire silica bronze sculpture weighs nearly two tons. The statue's base features six female figures, each representing a different academic discipline and embodying the ethnic diversity of USC. They are joined by a "ribbon of thought," signifying the interconnectedness of ideas and the continuous pursuit of learning. The base features two quotations from literature about Hecuba that are inscribed on the pedestal; a quotation from Hamlet and a pair of lines from Euripides' Hecuba. The two excerpts from Euripides appear in Greek. Notably, the quotation from Hamlet is attributed to "Shakespear's Hamlet", which the university said was intentional to give the statue a more "ancient feel". [4] [5] [6]

References

  1. ^ "Tommy Trojan, meet your female counterpart". Los Angeles Times. August 17, 2017.
  2. ^ "Letter to the Editor: Statue of Hecuba represents the importance of female leadership". November 28, 2017.
  3. ^ Mac Sweeney, Naoíse (2018). Troy: Myth, City, Icon. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 144. ISBN  9781472522511.
  4. ^ "USC Misspells Shakespeare on Newly Unveiled Statue". 23 August 2017.
  5. ^ "Battle of the Bards: UCLA and USC Argue over Statue's Spelling of Shakespeare". 25 August 2017.
  6. ^ "'To E Or Not To E': USC And UCLA Quibble Over How To Spell Shakespear(e)". NPR. 24 August 2017.

34°01′30″N 118°17′05″W / 34.025092°N 118.284735°W / 34.025092; -118.284735