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I Lift My Lamp Beside the Golden Door
 

Have you ever heard this passage before? Possibly you have, but I haven’t, not until this time.
I just returned from our trip to Chelsea, New York on Dec 10.
During our stay there we went out for walks through High Line Park in our neighborhood almost daily.
This unusual elevated high line park normally had many visitors, mostly tourists from Europe or other areas of United States.
From the walking path, we saw many visitors taking photos of an old building in the southwest direction showing a large mural of some females. I took a glance there, and passed without stopping.
Here at home I prepared writing in my facebook page about High Line Park, and opened High Line at Wikipedia, and then I was suddenly confronted with a little familiar painting of three females simulating the work of tourists’ photo-taking.
Therefore I decided to study the painting and found a treasure! Belatedly I lamented my ignorance for loss of sight on this masterpiece!. I made up my mind that on the next visit I will search this painting, the site and the neighborhood fully.
So I tried to gather information as needed.

Title: I Lift My Lamp Beside the Golden Door
Original poem: The New Colossus
Poet: Emma Lazarus, American poet. July 22, 1849 – November 19, 1887

 
The New Colossus By Emma Lazarus

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;

Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she

With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”
 

Emma Lazarus, poet
Emma Lazarus, c. 1824Emma Lazarus was an American author of poetry, prose, and translations, as well as an activist. She wrote the sonnet The New Colossus in 1883, which includes "lines of world-wide welcome".
Its lines appear inscribed on a bronze plaque on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, installed in 1903, a decade and a half after Lazarus's death.
The last stanza of the sonnet was set to music by Irving Berlin as the song "Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor" for the 1949 musical Miss Liberty, which was based on the sculpting of the Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World).
The last stanza was also set by Lee Hoiby in his song "The Lady of the Harbor" written in 1985 as part of his song cycle "Three Women".
Lazarus was also the author of Poems and Translations (New York, 1867); Admetus, and other Poems (1871); Alide: an Episode of Goethe's Life (Philadelphia, 1874); Poems and Ballads of Heine (New York, 1881); Poems, 2 vols. ; Narrative, Lyric and Dramatic; as well as Jewish Poems and Translations.


Dorothy Iannone (born 1933)
An Interview with Dorothy Iannone Dorothy Iannone is an American visual artist. Her autobiographical texts, films, and paintings explicitly depict female sexuality and "ecstatic unity." She lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
The majority of Iannone's paintings, texts, and visual narratives depict themes of erotic love. Her explicit renderings of the human body draw heavily from the artist's travels and from Japanese woodcuts, Greek vases, and visual motifs from Eastern religions, including Tibetan Buddhism, Indian Tantrism and Christian ecstatic traditions like those of the seventeenth-century Baroque.
Her small wooden statues of celebrities with visible genitals, including Charlie Chaplin and Jacqueline Kennedy, especially display with the artist's interest in African tribal statues.
For the High Line, Iannone creates a new, large-scale mural installation at 22nd St. Iannone’s mural features three colorful Statues of Liberty. Between them runs the words, “I Lift My Lamp Beside the Golden Door,” which is the final line from Emma Lazarus’s poem “The New Colossus,” the ode to the freedom promised by immigration to America engraved on a bronze plaque mounted inside the statue at Liberty Island. Iannone’s piece was conceived before the recent months of upheaval in the United States around immigration, an already contested topic; these recent debates have raised the Statue of Liberty anew as a symbol of the openness of New York City and the United States to those seeking asylum, freedom, or simply a better life. Iannone’s vibrant Liberties bring a bit of joy to an often exhausting and demoralizing political debate.

 
Park Views

Twenty sixth Street Highline Loft
High Line - Wikipedia

Bell Lab
Bell Labs Holmdel Complex - Wikipedia>

West Side Cowboy 1934
The High Line | NYfacts

Perspective High Line
the highline, nyc | High line, New york summer, Travel around the world

Crowded street


Gansevoort End
An end-to-end walk on the High Line in Manhattan - Washington Post

Old Railroad
The High Line | NYfacts

High Line Tourism
HighLine & Hudson Yards Walking Tour | Royal City Tours>

Group talk
We Came, We Talked, We Learned: The First High Line Network Symposium | The High  Line>

Twin building
A first look at Thomas Heatherwick's bulging High Line towers>

Promenade
The Original High Line: La Promenade Plantée in Paris - The Atlantic

Secret Garden prior to Redesign
The High Line | The Secret Garden

Video: Do not miss this vivid history of "I Lift my Lamp beside the Golden Door"

 

 

My opinion on migrants’ caravan
Our country has been inundated with endless streams of masses of people coming from Central America, other neighboring countries, and even remote areas of the world without any legal procedures, but trying to break U. S. borders forcibly, with all kinds of violence such as climbing the protective walls, throwing rocks and fires or fire-bombs, and any kinds of intolerable acts.
They are not “your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free…”.
They are illegals, thugs, drug addicts, and so on, asking for unconditional acceptance from I.C.E. asking for free feeding, housing, medical care,all kinds of benefits for life and for their children.
I say this sonnet and this painting here are not for the illegal migrants.

 
Kwan Ho Chung - Dec 17, 2018
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