Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Christ the Redeemer (statue)
Posted on 2:40 PM by Sriram Ganesh
 Christ the Redeemer is a statue of Jesus Christ in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The statue is 120 ft tall and has a weight of 635 tones. It is now a part of the new Seven Wonders of the World. It is located in the Corcovado Mountain  which is at a peak of 700 meters i.e. 2,300 feet in the Tujuca forest  National Park overlooking the city. The statue is made of concrete and  soapstone. As a symbol of Christianity, it has become an important icon  of Brazil, with Jesus Christ appearing to open his arms wide to embrace the entire city below.
The idea of a religious statue was first conceived in 1921 by Carlos Oswaldo who sketched out a design of Christ carrying a cross. When engineer Heitor da Silva Costa was commissioned to build the monument he enlisted the aid of Polish sculptor Paul Landowski and the design was changed to its current form and it was agreed that the statue would be sculpted in France (unlike the Statue of Liberty it was not a gift from France).
                                         In the evening, powerful  spotlights illuminate the statue of Christ, making it glow and appear  almost to levitate above the darkened peak. By day or night, no matter  where you may go in the city of Rio, the statue has the presence of an icon.
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