Thursday, April 3, 2025

City government challenged over decision regarding Columbus statue

An empty plinth on Mexico City’s Reforma Avenue, which once exhibited a statue of Christopher Columbus, continues to cause controversy. In the artistic community, the debate centers on not what should stand on the plinth, but who should be given the right to create it.

Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced Sunday that a sculpture of an indigenous Olmec woman would stand, and that the Columbus sculpture — removed in October amid threats it would be knocked down — would be relocated to Parque América, a park in the affluent Polanco district.

Writer Guillermo Sheridan and Twitter users have argued that the choice of the new statue should be decided by a public vote, but it is the city government’s choice of sculptor that has sparked the most intense debate. Pedro Reyes has been selected to create a figure he said would be called Tlalli.

Artists collective Moccam said he was the wrong person. “The tribute to 500 years of the resistance of indigenous women must be created by a woman, identified as part of an original peoples and sculptor. Enough of neocolonialism,” it said.

The chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Cuauhtémoc Medina, called the process into question. “For decades, artists, historians and critics have expressed our disagreement with the arbitrariness with the way in which the elected authorities … perpetuate the idea of the artist as an ideological servant,” he said.

“I am very sorry that an artist of some importance, such as Pedro Reyes, has fallen into the trap of operating as an official sculptor,” he added.

Sheinbaum explained her reasoning for the new symbolic Olmec effigy, but did not address the choice of sculptor. “The most important thing is that indigenous women are recognized on the main avenue of the capital of all Mexicans. It is something extremely profound, it goes far beyond a single sculpture. It recognizes the place of classism and racism in the history of Mexico and how colonialism not only left different legacies, but ones that we have to put at the center: the discrimination that exists toward different cultures and particularly the recognition not only of the original peoples but of women,” she said.

She added that Columbus would not be banished from the city. “It’s not about [the Columbus statue] not existing in the city, but that it has an adequate, dignified location.”

Reyes, meanwhile, said he appreciated the weight of his duty .”It is a responsibility that I take with great seriousness and with a deep sense of love for our country … if anyone can teach us how to take care of this planet, it is our native peoples,” he said.

With reports from El Economista

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum stands at the presidential podium looking out at an audience off-camera with her fist raised and her mouth open as if cheering. Behind her is a wall with the words in Spanish: Plan Mexico, Strenghtening the Economy and Well-Being, Mexico City April 3, 2025.

Sheinbaum unveils an even more ambitious version of her transformative Plan México

0
Sheinbaum said the projects she announced as part of Plan México will bring about more well-paid employment, less poverty and inequality, greater investment and production and more innovation.
A clear-cut strip of land cuts through the jungle along the Maya Train route in Yucatán

Government promises restoration plan for Maya Train environmental damage

0
Government officials said the track's builders will be responsible for funding a restoration effort that includes reforestation and improving natural migration corridors.
Cans of Cororna Extra beer lying on a bed of large ice cubes

Trump announces new US tariffs on Mexican… beer

14
Mexico didn't end up on Donald Trump's "liberation day" list of enemy countries, although the U.S. did impose tariffs on a surprising Mexican item: beer in cans.