Lions Bridge (Blog 9)

 Recently, we had our class outside at Lions Bridge. I didn't expect there to be a history lesson, but I learned that Anna Hyatt-Huntington had designed multiple of the sculptures there on the bridge, including the massive one by the water. I also learned that she was the daughter-in-law of Collis P. Huntington, who helped influence the massive railroad system that goes through Newport News up north. He also founded the Newport News shipyard nearby. For a good bit of class, we spent it analyzing the massive sculpture of the horse and four Greek men around it. It was called "Conquering the Wild". We had concluded that it was about the domestication of horses, but after reading more into it, its acutally signifying the attempts that her father-in-law made to capitalize on the railroad industry around him, but never fully succeeding. I don't know why I never bothered to look into the history of this sculpture, but after learning about it, I realized that a lot of my initial thoughts about art could be completely wrong. 

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