
by Isamu Noguchi, 1968
Isamu Noguchi designed Red Cube in 1968, a 28-foot vermillion steel sculpture balanced on one corner in front of the Marine Midland Bank building (now 140 Broadway) in lower Manhattan. The cube appears to defy gravity, its precarious angle creating tension against the vertical grid of the surrounding buildings.
Noguchi was born in Los Angeles to an American mother and Japanese father, and his work often bridged Eastern and Western aesthetics. Red Cube combines the bold simplicity of American minimalism with a playful sensibility. The cylindrical hole through the cube adds mystery and visual interest, breaking the form's solidity.
The sculpture sits in a sunken plaza, making it visible from street level while creating an intimate space around it. Unlike many public sculptures that feel detached from their surroundings, Red Cube engages actively with the architecture and pedestrian traffic of the Financial District. It remains one of New York's most distinctive public artworks.
Luxury wall art with the same mood and energy. Gallery-quality canvas, no museum crowds.
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