Photoshop Vs. Reality: Is This Photo Of Central Park At Sunset Real Or Fake?

nycphoto

The latest in our “Real or Fake” feature is yet another amazing image of Central Park. And no, they never get old. This new photo actually isn’t new at all, but (re-)surfaced online earlier today. Near the center of the image is the the Mandarin Oriental hotel at 80 Columbus Circle, and it’s here that make us question the authenticity of the “photograph.” It doesn’t take too sophisticated eye to pick up on how Columbus Circle’s twin towers look like computer renderings convincingly photoshopped into a spectacular panorama of Manhattan at sundown. We wouldn’t be surprised if there were further touch-ups and edits that we haven’t spotted yet. Still, despite these, the gridded array of skyscrapers and historic housing buildings that hug the western perimeter of the lush, green park make for great web fodder. Click on the photo for high-res!

Tatzu Nishi’s “Discovering Columbus” Fashions A Penthouse Apartment For Columbus Effigy

Earlier today, Japanese artist Tatzu Nishi and the Public Art Fund unveiled “Discovering Columbus”, a pop-up living room built around the 6-story high Christopher Columbus statue that rises from the base of Columbus Circle. The exhibit allows visitors to experience the sometimes overlooked statue in an entirely new way — up close and personal. Columbus stands in the middle of the 800-square-foot “apartment”, completely decked out with Bloomingdales furniture and custom-made wallpaper by Nishi himself. The exhibit will be free and open to the public for the next three months before an extensive restoration of the 120 year-old statue takes place. Read More.

After climbing six flights of exterior scaffolding stairs, one enters a white box that is perfectly outfitted as a beautiful apartment living room. The massive statue stands in the middle while a couch and chairs are situated around it for visitors to sit and relax. Nishi hoped his installation would encourage people to get to know Columbus, as if they are comfortably visiting his apartment. The statue not only enjoys a flat screen television and Central Park views, but also a mini-library to keep him company. Nishi’s whimsical wallpaper is right at home in this virtual living chamber, with its depictions of American kitsch like Elvis, McDonalds, Marilyn Monroe, and Mickey Mouse.

While the living room is a fun and exciting exhibition, it does serve a dual purpose. The enormous marble Columbus statue has not been touched in 120 years and is in desperate need of renovation. Once the show is over, the apartment will serve as an office and work station for the restoration teams who will tirelessly cleaning the monument in the bitter December weather.

Tatzu Nishi’s “Discovering Columbus” Fashions A Penthouse Apartment For Columbus Effigy

Earlier today, Japanese artist Tatzu Nishi and the Public Art Fund unveiled “Discovering Columbus”, a pop-up living room built around the 6-story high Christopher Columbus statue that rises from the base of Columbus Circle. The exhibit allows visitors to experience the sometimes overlooked statue in an entirely new way — up close and personal. Columbus stands in the middle of the 800-square-foot “apartment”, completely decked out with Bloomingdales furniture and custom-made wallpaper by Nishi himself. The exhibit will be free and open to the public for the next three months before an extensive restoration of the 120 year-old statue takes place. Read More.

After climbing six flights of exterior scaffolding stairs, one enters a white box that is perfectly outfitted as a beautiful apartment living room. The massive statue stands in the middle while a couch and chairs are situated around it for visitors to sit and relax. Nishi hoped his installation would encourage people to get to know Columbus, as if they are comfortably visiting his apartment. The statue not only enjoys a flat screen television and Central Park views, but also a mini-library to keep him company. Nishi’s whimsical wallpaper is right at home in this virtual living chamber, with its depictions of American kitsch like Elvis, McDonalds, Marilyn Monroe, and Mickey Mouse.

While the living room is a fun and exciting exhibition, it does serve a dual purpose. The enormous marble Columbus statue has not been touched in 120 years and is in desperate need of renovation. Once the show is over, the apartment will serve as an office and work station for the restoration teams who will tirelessly cleaning the monument in the bitter December weather.

Adventurous Plots And Curious Constructions In Columbus Circle

Statue of Columbus in Columbus Circle, via: Public Art Fund NY

The particulars of the “Christopher Columbus” that stands in Columbus Circle–his period dress, foppish hair, and, of course, fixed gaze–are hard to discern from the ground, at the base of his seventy-foot tall stone pedestal. In fact, if the Manhattan roundabout were not so named, few would be able to guess the identity of its silent denizen. Japanese artist Tatzu Nishi seeks to change all of this with his new project, “Discovering Columbus”, which is sponsored by the Public Art Fund of New York.

The artist proposes to build a public living room around the statue, with seventy feet of scaffolding and stairs holding above the Midtown traffic below. This would place the base of the statue’s pedestal at table-height, giving New Yorkers a chance to observe the statue up close and personal. The installation, open from September 20th to November 18th, will be free to visitors, although with an expected 100,000 viewers, sightseers will have to reserve spots in advance on the Public Art Fund’s website. For now, though, you’ll have to be content with watching the scaffolding rise to envelop the statue.

Progress being made on scaffolding, via: ANIMAL

Photo: Robert Caplin for The New York Times

Artist’s sketch of final space: Tatzu Nishi

Rendering of concept: Tatzu Nishi via Huffington Post