Great Monuments to Visit in San Jose

By Caerea Londerson


The city of San Jose is stuffed with many structures. A few of these San Jose monuments are stuffed with a past, while others are rather new. Many monuments in San Jose can be explored on your way round the city.

Quetzalcoatl

This eight foot tall charcoal grey, synthetic stone snake statue built by William Kreysler & Associates, based totally on a model supplied by Robert Graham, cost 5 hundred thousand to make. The word Quetzalcoatl means Quetzal serpent and is founded on an identical monument at the National Museum in Mexico. The statue is located at the south end of the Plaza de Cesar E. Chavez, just off South Market Street.

Oionos

Situated at 101 Paseo de San Antonio Oionos stands in front of the San Jose Repertory Theater. The big brown and white statue was designed by Doug Hollis. It points the way to the primary entrance to the theater, which produces about 6 performances each year.

Figure Holding the Sun

Found at 110 South Market Street in front of the San Jose Museum of Art is the fabricated steel statue. It was designed by Italo Scanga. It was placed here in 1988. The statue has many colors that are like the colours of the sunrise and sunset. The statue features a person holding a massive circle.

Brown Bear

San Jose monuments also include the Brown Bear Statue found in front of the Center for Performing Arts. The white sculpture has a plaque on the side of it that says it's a brown bear, although it resembles a polar bear to several visitors due to its white colour. The statue was designed by Benny Bufano. The Brown Bear monument is not as detailed which makes it more of a modern type of art and unique in appearance. Interestingly Benny Bufano made another bear sculpture which he named polar bear, and it's brown in color.

McKinley Was Here Statue

4 months before he was killed, United States President William McKinley addressed a sizeable crowd in St. James Park. After his demise, the town paid San Francisco based sculptor, Rupert Schmidt, $13,000 to create a statue that commemorates this fact. The statue has been in place since Feb 21, 1903.

Henry Naglee Statue

Henry Naglee made a fortune in San Jose by making wine. After his expiration in 1915, his girls paid to have a monument built in St. James Park to recollect their pop. The monument looks like a tombstone with info on it about the life of Henry Naglee.




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