Christ of the Ozarks
File:09-02-06--ChristofOzarks.jpg | |
36°24′32″N 93°43′31″W / 36.409000°N 93.725268°W | |
Location | Eureka Springs, Arkansas, United States |
---|---|
Type | statue |
Height | 20 metres (66 ft) |
Completion date | 1966 |
Dedicated to | Jesus Christ |
Christ of the Ozarks statue is a monumental sculpture of Jesus located near Eureka Springs, Arkansas, atop Magnetic Mountain. It was erected in 1966 as a "Sacred Project" by populist and white supremacist Gerald L. K. Smith. The statue stands 65.5 feet (20.0 meters) high.
Background
During the Great Depression, Gerald L. K. Smith served as an organizer for Huey P. Long's Share Our Wealth movement and led it briefly following Long's assassination in 1935. After many years of highly controversial, religiously charged activism that was primarily characterized by Holocaust denial, virulent racism, antisemitism, and pro-Nazi sympathies,[1] Smith retired to Eureka Springs, Arkansas, where he bought and renovated an old mansion. On other parts of the estate property, he planned a religious theme park, which he called "Sacred Projects". He commissioned the centerpiece, a gigantic statue of Jesus, completed in 1966. It is called Christ of the Ozarks.[2] He also completed a 4,100-seat amphitheater. This is the site of seasonal annual outdoor performances of The Great Passion Play. It is performed 3 nights a week from the last week of May through the end of October.[3]
Design
The statue was primarily the work of Emmet Sullivan, who also worked on nearby Dinosaur World. He had assisted in the work at Mount Rushmore. The statue is modernistic and minimalistic; there is little facial detail or expression, and the lines and forms are generally simplified.[citation needed] The arms are outstretched straight, sixty five feet from the tip of one finger to another, suggesting the Crucifixion; however the cross is not depicted. It sits on 320 tons of concrete and was designed to withstand winds of 500 miles an hour. The statue, which was completely built by hand out of steel and mortar, is also reinforced in a way to withstand the force of a passing tornado.[4] It has been nicknamed "Gumby Jesus" and "Our Milk Carton with Arms" by critics.[5][6]
In popular culture
See also
- List of statues of Jesus
- List of tallest statues
- List of the tallest statues in the United States
- Christ the Redeemer statue
References
- ↑ Jeansonne, Glen (Winter 2000). "Arkansas's Minister of Hate: A Research Odyssey". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 59 (59, 4): 22–24. doi:10.2307/40023193. JSTOR 40023193.
- ↑ "Gerald Lyman Kenneth Smith (1898–1976)", The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture, 2009, accessed 10 May 2011
- ↑ "The Great Passion Play".
- ↑ "Encyclopedia of Arkansas". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
- ↑ Grubiak, Margaret M. (2020). Monumental Jesus : landscapes of faith and doubt in modern America. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0-8139-4375-6. OCLC 1117310989.
- ↑ Bahr, Jeff; Peterson, Eric; Vaughan, Donald (2016). Unique America: Strange, Unusual, and Just Plain Fun: A Trip Through America; Hundreds of Extraordinary Sights (2nd ed.). Morton Grove, Illinois: Publications International. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-68022-574-7. OCLC 1022851563.
External links
- "Christ of the Ozarks" Archived 2014-11-08 at the Wayback Machine, The Great Passion Play Website
- Sacred Projects: Christ of the Ozarks
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