
In 1980 the International Sculpture Conference Exhibition was being held in Washington D.C. and sculptor J. Seward Johnson, Jr. created a cast aluminum statue called The Awakening that was installed in Hains Point Park. The statue used five pieces to depict a giant man partially buried beneath the earth and attempting to free himself. If the giant stood up, he would have been over 100 feet tall. His ambiguous, open-mouthed expression made it look like he was screaming, although some park visitors thought he was yawning from waking up.

Finally Johnson sold the statue in 2007, and in 2008 it was excavated and relocated to National Harbor, where the giant continues his perpetual awakening today.
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