The name Kala Ghoda (Black Horse) is a reference to the
presence of a black stone statue of King Edward VII (as the then Prince of
Wales) mounted on a horse that was built by Jewish businessman and
philanthropist Albert Abdullah David Sassoon, although this statue was removed
from the precinct in 1965 and subsequently placed inside the Byculla Zoo. A
local legend stated that the statues of King Edward and the one of Shivaji on a
horse at the Gateway of India came to life after midnight and battled it out on
the streets.
In 2017, the 'Kala Ghoda' returned to the area with a new
statue of a similar looking horse without a rider, being commissioned by the
Kala Ghoda Association. The statue, titled 'Spirit of Kala Ghoda' was designed
by architect Alfaz Miller and sculpted by Shreehari Bhosle. Ref Wikipedia.
Linking to Black and White Weekend
...it looks regal!
ReplyDeleteAn iconic horsie
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteIt's a fine statue! YAM xx
Excellent statue - such a proud horse!
ReplyDeleteTom is right. And the background... life can be black and white.
ReplyDeleteBut I want color.
Amazing
ReplyDeleteLooks like politic changes statues.
ReplyDeleteVery well done.
ReplyDeleteWow. Regine
ReplyDeletewww.rsrue.blogspot.com
Beautiful statue.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the back story!
ReplyDelete