A 25-foot-tall statue of the famous photo depicting a sailor kissing a nurse in New York's Times Square on V-J Day has been erected at 13 Mile and Woodward in Royal Oak as part of a publicity and fundraising effort by the Michigan World War II Legacy Memorial.
This V-J Day in Times Square Sculpture Of The Sailor Kissing A Nurse measures: HEIGHT 12" Length x Depth 5.25" by 4.5" Base Diameter 5 1/8" This V-J Day in Times Square Sculpture Of The Sailor Kissing A Nurse is Made of durable composite resin cast in bronze powder.
Unconditional Surrender is a series of sculptures by Seward Johnson resembling a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt, V–J day in Times Square, but said by Johnson to be based on a similar, less well known, photograph by Victor Jorgensen.
In another shoot he’d photographed an Ethiopian soldier’s … The image of a sailor kissing a nurse on the day World War II … The Story behind the Famous Kiss.
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(Left) The 25-foot ‘Kissing Sailor’ statue in Sarasota, Florida; (Center) The photo of the New York Time’s Square kiss taken by US Navy photo journalist Jorgensen and (Right) Carl Muscarello, one of the men claiming to the the ‘Kissing Sailor’ in the photo reenacting the kiss with his wife.
Unconditional Surrender Statue. San Diego, California. If the photograph of raising the American flag on Iwo Jima is the quintessential World War II icon for triumph in a just war, then "Unconditional Surrender" is the icon for the just rewards of victory.
Unconditional Surrender Statue Beyond heroically scaled version of the famous WWII photo of a sailor kissing a nurse. The original fiberglass statue was dismantled May 30, 2012, and replaced by an identical statue of painted bronze in February 2013.
V-J Day in Times Square (also V-Day and The Kiss) is a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt that portrays a U.S. Navy sailor grabbing and kissing a stranger—a woman in a white dress—on Victory over Japan Day ("V-J Day") in New York City's Times Square on August 14, 1945.
A statue depicting the infamous couple kissing in Times Square to celebrate the end of World War II will head to San Diego on Valentine's Day.