Probably. But just having a tall tower is no guarantee of world-famousness. For instance, San Antonio has the somewhat taller Tower of the Americas, yet I doubt most people outside the San Antonio region would recognize it. And in looking up that Wiki page I found a link to Las Vegas’ Stratosphere which I’d never heard of before, even though it’s taller.
I would be surprised if most people didn’t know which of these cities this is in. [ETA crap, the link doesn’t work, it’s meant to be the Mannequin Pis.]
By the way, which cities are Sofia or Vienna right next door to? Vienna’s as far from Paris as Chicago is from New York.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if, after the 2012 olympics, England donated this piece to Melbourne as a symbol of England’s solidarity with the Commonwealth?
You could rename it “Flight of the Boomerang.”
I would be astounded if more than one person in a thousand could tell you what city that is in. I only recognise the sculpture itself because it has been overused in kitsch art, such as pissing soda into whiskey glasses or hideous concrete lawn ornaments. I always assumed there was an original, but until I just looked it up I had no idea where it was located.
I find it really, really hard to believe that 1% of the population would even recognise the statue, much less be able to tell you where it is. Let’s face it, there are at least 1000 artworks that are more famous, and virtually nobody knows where any are located.
Cities? Who mentioned cities? They are the capitals of nations adjoining Germany in one instance, and approximately halfway between Greece and Germany in the other. Berlin is the capital of Germany. Athens is the capital of Germany. The point being that people can recognise landmarks in a handful of capitals cities, but are unable to visually identify other capitals even in the same region.
I actually considered using the Mannequin-Pis as an example of an “iconic” statue, as opposed to structure, in the OP – because I did lknow that it’s the iconic “cue” for Brussels. I decided it was overkill in my list of examples, which may have been a mistake. Just FWIW.
Why so pissy? Despite the pun, I do think your tone is bizarrely abrasive, and I think you’re making some big assumptions about other people sharing your ignorance (in the true sense of the word).
It doesn’t matter whether it was cities or not that you were talking about (it wasn’t very clear), I just think you’re over-egging the “European countries are so small” pudding. After all, we don’t tend to talk about Chicago and Cleveland, for example, as being ‘right next door’ to each other.