Culture Should the Fourth Plinth be a soapbox for trans politics? - London's Trafalgar Square now has a creepy sculpture of the faces of 726 troons

The aesthetically and thematically problematic sculpture by Teresa Margolles comes with a backstory that many Londoners may find perplexing​

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Mil Veces un Instante (A Thousand Times in an Instant) by the 61-year-old Mexican artist Teresa Margolles TOLGA AKMEN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Alastair Sooke
Chief Art Critic
18 September 2024 1:29pm

Like a shipping container winched onto the side of a dock, an unwieldy new sculpture, by the 61-year-old Mexican artist Teresa Margolles, appeared on top of the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square today – the 15th temporary commission to occupy this contested site since 1999, when Mark Wallinger’s affecting, life-sized model of Christ, Ecce Homo, popped up.

Recalling the mock-ups for Margolles’s block-like artwork, I worried that the finished sculpture, which weighs more than three tonnes, would be a disaster, with all the elegance of a fly-tipped fridge. In the event, it has more grace and nuance than I was expecting – but it’s still beset with aesthetic problems, and comes freighted with a Central American backstory that, writ large in such a prominent setting in central London, many may find perplexing.

Titled Mil Veces un Instante (A Thousand Times in an Instant), it takes the form of a gigantic cuboid, almost as big as the plinth itself, assembled from plaster casts of the faces of 726 trans, non-binary, and gender-non-conforming people from Mexico and Britain. These are attached to an armature in the manner of a Mesoamerican “tzompantli” or skull rack, which displayed the grisly remains of war captives and sacrificial victims like beads on an abacus.

The piece was inspired, if that’s the right word, by the still-unsolved murder in Mexico in 2015 of a transgender woman who was Margolles’s friend; unsurprisingly, since the artist trained as a forensic pathologist, and has a studio attached to a morgue, the result is a sombre, funereal artwork, with the blanched, chunky presence of the Cenotaph. All those ghostly faces, some smeared with traces of makeup transferred during the casting process (along with, apparently, hair, eyelashes, and skin cells), are obviously reminiscent of death masks; yet, confusingly, the sculpture is also intended as a celebratory monument to the “resilience” of the trans community worldwide. Who throws a party inside a catacomb?

The casts have the quality of smashed crockery, as if a pet cat had run amok across a plate rack, and their rough edges, coupled with those traces of cosmetics, provide pleasing texture. That said, they also call to mind a quintessential primary-school art-class activity in which children are invited to make papier-mâché heads using balloons. All those lined-up faces – including one, oddly, seemingly with big black eyebrows as bushy as those of Groucho Marx – also made me think of the children’s game “Guess Who?”.

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Margolles’s work feels as alien as a spaceship from a faraway planet TOLGA AKMEN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

Looking inwards, they’re clustered together defensively in the manner of a “tortoise formation” shield wall deployed by an ancient Roman legion. But the in-between gaps are unfortunately wide, so that the underlying steel structure – which, awkwardly, resembles a chicken coop – is too prominent.

Quite how Margolles’s masks, which have been treated only with a thin layer of lacquer, will withstand the British weather this winter is anybody’s guess. Here’s mine: in the coming months, they’ll slowly start to discolour, dissolve, and droop. Not pretty.

Perhaps the biggest issue, though, is why the Fourth Plinth Commissioning Group was adamant that, above all, what London needed for the next two years was a public sculpture tied so intimately to the experiences of trans women on the other side of the world. The persecution of transgender people is abhorrent. But should the Fourth Plinth be a soapbox for identity politics? Margolles’s work feels as alien as a spaceship from a faraway planet.

Details: london.gov.uk

Source (Archive)
 
Titled Mil Veces un Instante (A Thousand Times in an Instant), it takes the form of a gigantic cuboid, almost as big as the plinth itself, assembled from plaster casts of the faces of 726 trans, non-binary, and gender-non-conforming people from Mexico and Britain. These are attached to an armature in the manner of a Mesoamerican “tzompantli” or skull rack, which displayed the grisly remains of war captives and sacrificial victims like beads on an abacus.
An horrifying, but at the same time fitting, art piece
 
You know, I think people massively underestimate the mental health impact of being constantly surrounded by ugliness. Ugly buildings. Ugly-looking cars. Ugly public art installations.

I think that's the real reason everyone is "depressed" these days. Victorians worked longer and harder than we did, but the fruits of their labour were things like St. Pancras station and the Albert Hall. Now you work 40 hours a week and you're rewarded with things like this.
 
For anyone unfamiliar with the fourth plinth, they put stuff up there on a rotating basis. Here's all the sculptures that have been displayed so far:
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Ecce Homo (a life-size model of Christ, dwarfed by the plinth), Regardless of History (a head crushed by a book and a tree), Monument (the plinth cast in resin, inverted), Allison Lapper Pregnant (an artist with phocomelia depicted while she was pregnant)
1932655572_4ec8fc3e6d_b.jpg57cfe357f2ae9a4a0896fe5a68c9b78595dea930-3000x1996.jpgThe_Fourth_Plinth._'Nelson's_Ship_in_a_Bottle'_by_Yinka_Shonibare,_Trafalgar_Square,_London._-...jpg
Model for a Hotel 2007 (I think it was supposed to be like a hotel for the pigeons in Trafalgar Square), One & Other (performance art, members of the public entered a lottery and then got a whole hour on the plinth to do whatever they wanted), Nelson's Ship In A Bottle (HMS Victory, because Trafalgar Square and Nelson's Column)
fourth-plinth-feb-2012-MagnusD.jpgKatharina-Fritsch-Hahn-Cock-Kunstgiesserei-St-Gallen-IMG-2092.jpg-preview2.jpg2x1_gift_horse.jpg
Powerless Structures Fig 101 (a kid on a rocking horse as a counterpoint to the Equestrian statues in the square) Hahn/Cock (a "feminist sculpture" as a counterpoint to the "masculinity" of the male statues in the square), Gift Horse (a dead, riderless horse with a ribbon displaying a London Stock Exchange ticker, as a counterpoint to the Equestrian statues in the square and something to do with power)
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Really Good (supposedly a sarcastic thumbs up as a commentary on the state of the country), The Invisible Enemy Should Not Exist (a Lamassu destroyed by ISIS made of date syrups cans, the Iraqi date industry also having been destroyed by ISIS), The End (a melting ice cream with a drone on it - supposedly a commentary on surveillance and society on the verge of collapse, because Trafalgar Square is a hotspot for protests)
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Antelope (Sculpture that restages a 1914 photograph of John Chilembwe and John Chorley. Chilembwe wears a hat in an act of defiance and is way bigger than the missionary Chorley), the the trans tzompantli, then upcoming in 2026 is "Lady In Blue" (a statue of a black "everywoman" which for some insane reason is getting made with actual lapis lazuili) and then in 2028 "Untitled" (a horse and rider draped in a shroud).

I don't mind the Fourth Plinth as a concept. It's an interesting idea, and anything too objectionable is only going to be there temporarily. But it'd be nice if they limited it to British artists since it is outside the National Gallery. At this point having statues there that serve as a "counterpoint" to the other equestrian statues of Kings and Generals, or as a "counterpoint" to the "masculinity of the space", or "raise questions about who gets commemorated in art" has been done to absolute death. The most subversive thing someone could do would be to submit a bronze equestrian statue of William IV (which the plinth was built in anticipation of) but it'd never get selected. The HMS Victory one worked best for the space but it's now permanently displayed outside the National Maritime Museum.

Anyway, I look forward to mass seething about this statue when it inevitably starts falling to pieces in the rain, or when it gets defaced, and then the screeching when its time on the plinth is up about how there needs to be a permanent statue for trans people somewhere.
 
Powerless Structures Fig 101 (a kid on a rocking horse as a counterpoint to the Equestrian statues in the square)
I rather like that one it's fun, whimsical and not fucking awful to look upon. The whole trans death mask thing is just fucking ugly and am really tired of acting like ugliness is a thing to be celebrated.
 
The most subversive thing someone could do would be to submit a bronze equestrian statue of William IV (which the plinth was built in anticipation of) but it'd never get selected. The HMS Victory one worked best for the space but it's now permanently displayed outside the National Maritime Museum.

Should be Queen Elizabeth II on horse and be done with it.

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They've done nothing but display stupid shit on it ever since they came up with this crackpot idea.
I'd say it's time to get rid of the fucking thing and it certainly shouldn't be used to highlight the self induced persecution of a bunch of perverts.
 
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