
Stake attention in this memory
A black and green informational sign is mounted on a low, square, black granite pedestal. The sign is partially obscured by a tree trunk on the left side. The sign is in Russian, with a title that translates to "Monument to Tagore," with a subtitle "Park Druzhby (Friendship)." The sign details that the monument was installed in 1990, sculpted by Gautam Pal, designed by Io. N. Konovalov, engineered by B.E. Korsi, and made of bronze and granite. The text goes on to describe Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), an Indian poet, composer, and social activist whose work shaped the Bengali literature and music and who advocated for love and humanism, wrote extensively in Indian languages, and published essays and novels on political and social issues. The sign concludes by describing Tagore as the first non-European to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913 and how his poems are now the national anthems of India and Bangladesh. The monument is located in the Park Druzhby (Friendship), at 55.854, 37.474 in Moskva, Russia. The sign is surrounded by dirt and dead leaves. A metal object is lying on the ground next to the sign. The image is taken from a low angle, looking up at the sign.
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