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Rumi and Huru - Public Art Fund
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diSuveroM 2100

Mark di Suvero Rumi and Huru

Doris C. Freedman Plaza
December 16, 1993 - August 15, 1994

About the Exhibition

Rumi is a typical work by Mark di Suvero (b. 1933, Shanghai, China). Made of I-beams and steel plates, it is large, metal and abstract. It stands 25 feet high and weighs approximately 4 tons. Created between 1990 and 1992, Rumi pays homage to a 15th-century Persian poet of the same name.

Huru, meaning “hello” and “goodbye” in an Aboriginal Australian language, also is made of I-beams, but in a form reminiscent of a person with extend arms—a greeting for “hello” or “goodbye”.

Location

Doris C. Freedman Plaza
Doris C. Freedman Plaza

Photo Gallery

diSuveroM 2099
diSuveroM 2100 1
diSuveroM 2101

Supported by the Public Art Fund, Percent for Art, and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.


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