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Desire Lions
Friday November 21st 2008, 10:31 am by Steve Portigal

The impulse to touch and its long-term effects as remnants of previous touchers touching serve as an invitation
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Japanese Tea Garden, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, November 2008

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Kyoto, Japan, January 2008

Also see previously: Friction Never Sleeps



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1 comment so far

[...] Statue Folklore It seems to be a widespread instinct for passers-by to touch statues, in greeting or for luck, if they represent a popular personality, as when Tory Members of Parliament rub the toe of Winston Churchill’s statue at the entrance to the Chamber, and Liberals that of Lloyd George. Animal images also attract this affectionate gesture; the nose of a lion-faced door-knocker at Durham Cathedral is well polished by the constant touch of visitors, as is the beak of a certain falcon in the Egyptian Gallery of the British Museum. The other recurrent piece of folklore about a statue is the assertion that it gets down from its pedestal and walks about, or sits down for a rest, whenever it hears midnight strike; the lions at the door of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, either roar or drink from the gutter. Such statements are a catch, for ‘when it hears’ is an impossible condition. (Thanks, Anne!) Previously: Desire Lions [...]

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