Tlalli was inspired by the
Olmec colossal heads and its intention was to honor 500 years of the resistance of
indigenous women. The mayor of Mexico City,
Claudia Sheinbaum, announced on 5 September 2021 that Tlalli would replace the monument to Columbus. The announcement, design, name, and the selection of Reyes as the sculptor, as well the undiscussed removal of Columbus, received mixed opinions. Days later, Sheinbaum said that a committee would determine its future, and then in October stated a copy of The Young Woman of Amajac would be placed there instead.
Although the government of the city never addressed the project as canceled, journals and academic members consider it as such.[1][2][3] According to the city's Secretary of Culture, Claudia Curiel de Icaza, the project is still under consideration but The Young Woman of Amajac has higher priority.[4]
In the context of the commemorations of the 500th anniversary of the
Fall of Tenochtitlan, the capital of the
Aztecs and present day
Mexico City, the city government announced several changes and celebrations to take place in 2021.[8] Among them were the renaming of the plazas and a metro station to include a pre-conquest point of view.[9] For example the renaming of Puente de Alvarado (named after the Spanish conquistador
Pedro de Alvarado) to Avenida México-Tenochtitlan.[10][11]
On 5 September 2021, International Indigenous Women's Day, Sheinbaum announced that the statue of Columbus would not be returned to its original site. Instead, it would be relocated to
American Park in
Polanco,
Miguel Hidalgo.[5] She also said that Tlalli would replace the statue of Columbus, to honor 500 years of the resistance of indigenous women,[12] and that the relocation was not to "erase history" but to "deliver social justice".[13] She also mentioned that the decision was taken after receiving 5,000 signatures from indigenous women who asked to "decolonize Paseo de la Reforma".[14]
Description
Tlalli was designed by Mexican artist
Pedro Reyes,[15] a similar smaller version (less than 1 m (3 ft 3 in) across) was exhibited in
Lisson Gallery in New York City in May 2021.[16] The sculpture was proposed to be made of
volcanic rock and it was being sculpted in three workshops located in
Iztapalapa,
Chimalhuacán and
Coyoacán by women artisans and sculptors.[17] The sculpture was based on the
Olmecs, a pre-Columbian civilization that developed during the
Mesoamerican Preclassic Era.[13] The word Tlalli means "land" or "earth" in
Nahuatl.[15] Reyes was inspired by the
Olmec colossal heads, and according to him, he had difficulties transforming Tlalli into a woman since the original heads were based on men.[17]
Tlalli was projected to be a 6.5 m (21 ft) high head, supported by an additional 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)
tezontle base.[18] Its diameter would have been 5 m (16 ft) with an approximate weight of 150 t (150 long tons; 170 short tons). The eyes were inspired by those of a jaguar and her lips on two snakes. For the hair, a pair of
braids that converge at a point at the
occipital bone were chosen to form a representation of
Nahui Ollin, the Earthquake Sun.[19] According to Reyes, he first designed her to have a
bun but he was told by anthropologists that pre-Hispanic cultures used braids which imitated the appearance of
ergots.[20]
Reception
The initial announcement received mixed reactions. Mexican president
Andres Manuel López Obrador approved of the decision to use the sculpture.[21] The choice of Reyes as the sculptor received criticism, namely, for the fact that he is not a woman and he is not indigenous.[22]Tlalli's name received further commentaries, including from
Yásnaya Aguilar [
es],
Mixe linguist and writer, who questioned the Nahuatl name when Olmecas would have spoken the
Mixe–Zoque languages. Aguilar also criticized the generalization of women in public sculpture, in comparison to men who are individually honored.[23] Researcher Lucía Melgar added that it represents women as "generic, mute and immobilized".[23] Historian
Federico Navarrete [
es] said it exemplifies how indigenous people are viewed with an "essentialist view that [they are] all the same".[23] Josefa Sánchez Contreras, Zoque PhD candidate in Mesoamerican Studies, considered the proposal as an act of "desperate
neoindigenism", which is added to other similar acts carried out by López Obrador during his six-year term, while in the rest of the country, projects were developed on the ejido lands of indigenous peoples.[24]
More than 300 people linked to art and culture signed a petition for Sheinbaum requesting the exclusion of Reyes from the project and the creation of a committee composed of women from indigenous communities to choose a monument that represents them. Reyes explained that the government chose him because there are few monumental
stonecutters in the country and that the project had to be completed before March 2022.[25] Due to the controversy, Sheinbaum determined that the Committee for Monuments and Artistic Works in Public Spaces (Comité de Monumentos y Obras Artísticas en Espacios Públicos, COMAEP) will determine which is the most appropriate option to replace Columbus.[26]
As a response, on 25 September 2021, a group of
feminists placed a purple wooden woman with her fist raised on the empty Columbus plinth. They symbolically re-named the intersection the Glorieta de las mujeres que luchan (Women Who Fight Roundabout). Additionally, they painted the names of murdered and disappeared women on the metal police barricades.[27]
^"Tree of the Victorious Night". The Official Guide to Mexico City. Government of Mexico City.
Archived from the original on 6 December 2022. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
^Israde, Yanireth; Morales, Francisco (11 September 2021).
"Tlalli, la escultura que sustituirá a Colón" [Tlalli, the sculpture that will replace Columbus]. El Heraldo de Aguascalientes (in Spanish). Mexico City.
Archived from the original on 12 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.