This famous monument to Poland's greatest composer, Fryderyk Chopin (Pomnik Fryderyka Chopina), has a dramatic history of its own. It was designed by the sculptor Wacław Szymanowski and unveiled in 1926. Like so many of Warsaw's historic treasures, it was deliberately destroyed by the Nazis during World War II. The striking art nouveau monument you see today is a faithful replica, recreated in 1958, symbolizing the city's resilience.
The man it honors was recognized as a genius from a young age. The official verdict on his final exams at the Warsaw Conservatory in 1829 simply read: "Chopin, Fryderyk; third year student. Outstanding abilities; musical genius." More than 200 years after his birth, that assessment remains indelible. As his biographer Adam Zamoyski notes, Chopin is often placed alongside Bach as a composer who never wrote a bad piece of music, but he was also a revolutionary who profoundly altered the course of music.
Though he lived only to the age of 39, a romantic legend was quick to form around the composer. Stories told of him climbing out of his cot as a child to play the piano by moonlight. Later in life, his striking good looks, dapper style, and his famous, unconventional relationship with the cross-dressing writer George Sand provided plenty of material for gossip that still keeps tongues wagging to this day.