Thursday, March 29, 2007

WHERE WAS I? As usual, it's in one of the five boroughs. Leave your guesses in the comments section.
























VISUAL CLUE ADDED MARCH 30
























VISUAL CLUE ADDED MARCH 31
























BONUS PHOTOS ADDED APRIL 2
















































Photos: David Marc Fischer

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Central Park in the snow a couple of weeks ago.

Anonymous said...

It's the meteorite at the Rose Space Center in the Museum of Natural History that was stolen from Native Americans in West Linn, Oregon. (Give it back ... grrrrr.)

Scott said...

Riverside Park?

Anonymous said...

manhattan?

David Marc Fischer said...

Wow--what a curious and eager bunch tonight!

No. No. No. Yes.

Thanks for the interest!!

Anonymous said...

Is it a place that we most likely have never, ever, been?

David Marc Fischer said...

Debbie, that's hard for me to determine. My guess would be that at least one of the participants (aside from yours truly) has either been there or close by.

Anonymous said...

Mars 2112 on Broadway and 50th Street?

David Marc Fischer said...

Sorry, Debbie--it's not the fourth rock from the sun.

Anonymous said...

Andy Goldsworthy's Garden of Stones Holocaust memorial at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Battery Park City.

Looks cool.

David Marc Fischer said...

Correct, Debbie!

The work is Garden of Stones by Andy Goldsworthy--and I don't think it ever looks cooler than when snow has accumulated on its terrace at the Museum of Jewish Heritage.

I noticed its winter beauty more than a year ago, when I was at the museum for the World War II exhibit Ours To Fight For.

I then returned to the museum at the end of this winter to take the pictures for Where Was I? The terrace was closed when I got there, but security guards were kind enough to open it up for me.

Dwarf oak trees are supposed to grow out of the boulders, but in the meantime the work still looks fine--especially with frosting!

David Marc Fischer said...

Oh...by the way...a harpist informed me that the work now has an "extension" at Cornell University.