This Ruth Bader Ginsburg Bust celebrates the late U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice (1933-2020). This treasure is a thoughtful gift for a strong woman, or a delightful addition to your own desk, office, or bookshelf.
The RBG bust serves as a reminder to stand up for equal rights, to fight against immoral and unequal treatment in the broadest sense.
Monuments: Commemoration and Controversy (January 28--July 3, 20220 explores monuments and their representations in public spaces as flashpoints of fierce debate over national identity, politics, and race that have raged for centuries. Offering a historical foundation for understanding today’s controversies, the exhibition features fragments of a statue of King George III torn down by American Revolutionaries, a souvenir replica of a bulldozed monument by Harlem Renaissance sculptor Augusta Savage, and a maquette of New York City’s first public monument to a Black woman, Harriet Tubman, among other objects from the Museum’s collection. The exhibition reveals how monument-making and monument-breaking have long shaped American life as public statues have been celebrated, attacked, protested, altered, and removed. Curated by Wendy Nālani E. Ikemoto, senior curator of American art