2 stories
·
0 followers

Hogwarts In Manhattan: The 1,000 Gargoyles & Grotesques of City College

7 Comments and 14 Shares

Last week, I took a trip up to 138th Street and Amsterdam to scout a location I’ve been meaning to visit for the longest time: the City College of New York.

002

City College is one of those great places in the city where you step through the gates…

003

…and suddenly feel like you’ve been transported far, far from Manhattan.

006

I was walking around the north quadrangle, which consists of the original four campus buildings built in 1906…

005

…and as I was heading into Harris Hall, I suddenly got the strangest feeling that I was being watched. I turned to my right…

101

…and this guy was sticking his tongue out at me!

101a

And he wasn’t alone. Above me, a frowning professor-type was beckoning me in…

102

…while on my left, I was being laughed at:

104

There were even more faces buried in the arch…

105

…all watching with mocking stares.

106

Finally, two owl statues were positioned on either side of the door.

107

In total, that’s 9 bits of statuary crammed around a single entrance. Amazed, I stepped back and looked up…

130

…and realized I was being watched…

131

…from every direction I turned.

132

City College has over 1,000 (yes, 1,000!) grotesques and gargoyles covering its buildings, and each has such individual character that it’s hard to kick the feeling they’re on the verge of coming to life Hogwarts-style to mock you as you walk around the campus.

I spent about an hour or so trying to find as many of the bizarre and wonderful creatures as I could – here are some of my favorites.

152

When it comes to the traditional demon-style grotesques and gargoyles, City College has some great examples. Several winged creatures are perched around the top of the tower at Compton Hall…

153

…each a completely different style from the next.

154

The most haunting, in my opinion, is the gargoyle on the west-side, which features a human head disturbingly attached to an eagle-like body, its mouth agape in a pained screech:

155

Another favorite demon can be found perched on the corner of Harris Hall…

160 - HH01

…a horned figure holding a book with the initials FD written inside. I’d love to know who or what this is in reference to (thought for a minute the F might be for Faust, but as far as I know, Faust never had a surname beginning with D).

161 - HH

Another demon can be found above the clock on Harris Hall…

162

…a strange robed figure leaning in an ear to hear the students below:

163

A shield-holding demon:

165

But there are more than just demons at City College. In fact, much the statuary follows a particular theme. For example, look closely…

166

…and you’ll see a laborer drilling into the side of the building:

167

Another literally screws into the corner of the building:

171

This guy is yanking out a stray nail with a hammer:

172

Another is hammering on an anvil:

173

Still another has at it with a sledge-hammer.

168

Not sure what this one is up to:

175

Whereas these literally seem to be taking part in the construction (or deconstruction?) of the building, still another group of grotesques are meant to represent the various disciplines and arts at the university.

180

It starts simple, with a basic professorial-type reading a book:

181

I love this glasses-clad professor leering down at students entering the building:

182

A mathematician. If you notice some of the grotesques have a decidedly more human appearance than the typical caricatures, there’s a good chance they were based on members of the faculty.

174

Then we hit the music department…

183

…and you have nearly a full band…

184

…playing above you:

184a

My favorite is the drummer:

184b

Then on to the sciences: love this guy examining a butterfly with a magnifying glass:

185

A Dumbledore-like chemist mixes a potion:

185a

And of course, painting, represented by quite possibly the angriest-looking artist in New York:

186

I’m guessing that this figure contemplating an hourglass represents philosophy:

188

Another figure, clearly based on a real person (how great would it be to be forever immortalized as a grotesque?):

189

Still more fascinating examples can be found surrounding the entrances to buildings. Above the door to Baskeville…

139

…is a professor holding out what appears to be a test in geometry:

140

A key-holder…

136

…and beside him, another life-like representation:

137

There’s something so wonderful about mixing such staid architecture with such whimsical figures. This guy may be in charge of holding a formal shield, for example, but he could care less about it:

144

Perhaps he’s having a conversation with his neighbor?

143

In fact, no one’s all that happy at this entrance:

145

A few final ones. In the corner of Wingate Hall…

200 - HH

….a guy flips his feet over his head while precariously holding on:

201

Nearby, an impish-looking fellow holds onto a ring:

202

And beside him, an older-looking grotesque holds the seal of the college:

203

In fact, quite a lot of the figures are being acrobatic on Wingate:

211

As you head into the main entrance at Harris…

220

…this guy is screaming at you:

222

If the grotesques look to be in immaculate shape, it’s thanks to a restoration program that began in 1986. At the time, many of the terra cotta figures had fallen into total disrepair (some had even smashed after falling from their perches).

223

Each figure was restored to its original condition, recast by hand, and returned to its place, at the time considered to be the largest terra cotta preservation effort in the country. You can see a bit of the process in this Facebook post – the picture below shows just how badly this particular figure had deteriorated (the white areas are the restored pieces that had broken off):

restore

The replacements should weather the elements much longer than their predecessors.

240

Annoyed:

243

Astounded:

244

These pictures show a mere 50 or 60 of the 1,000 grotesques and gargoyles covering the north quad at City College – and I didn’t even get into the cathedral-like Shephard Hall.

250

The campus is open to the public, and is absolutely worth a trip to admire these amazing works of art. If Hogwarts had a satellite campus in New York City, I’m pretty sure City College would be it.

-SCOUT

Read the whole story
skeetio
3867 days ago
reply
Bath, MI
Share this story
Delete
6 public comments
zwol
3865 days ago
reply
It says something about the density of STUFF in Manhattan that I used to live 30 blocks south of this and had *no idea*.
Pittsburgh, PA
shamgar_bn
3866 days ago
reply
How do I go back in time and attend college here?
Wake Forest, North Carolina
steingart
3866 days ago
reply
Fantastic.
Princeton, NJ
DerBonk
3866 days ago
reply
Too bad he didn't show the actual main building ;) The NAC may not be as beautiful, but just as interesting, having been designed by prison architects (at least I was told that it was).
Germany
grammargirl
3866 days ago
reply
OK, I finally followed this blog. It's so good!
Brooklyn, NY
satadru
3867 days ago
reply
CCNY as Hogwarts. Awesome.
New York, NY
deezil
3866 days ago
Maybe Faust and Dante?

The PostgreSQL JDBC Driver is now PgBouncer compliant

1 Share

Three years ago a discussion was launched on the Pgbouncer mailing-list [1] about the JDBC Driver which does not disable prepared statements when using ?prepareThreshold=0 in the connection string.

Read the whole story
skeetio
3976 days ago
reply
Bath, MI
Share this story
Delete