Poetic justice? Toppled slaver's statue replaced by one of Black protester in UK

Reuters

Published Jul 15, 2020 03:41AM ET

Updated Jul 15, 2020 12:42PM ET

By Ben Makori

BRISTOL, England (Reuters) - A sculpture of a Black protester with her fist raised in the air has been erected in a stealthy night-time operation in place of a 17th Century English slave trader whose statue was toppled by anti-racism demonstrators in the port city of Bristol.

Edward Colston, who made a fortune from trading in West African slaves, was pulled down and thrown in the harbour of the city in southwest England last month by protesters demonstrating in the wake of the death of African-American George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.

The sculpture of Jen Reid, who was photographed standing on the plinth of Colston's statue just after it was pulled down, was put up in the early hours of Wednesday by a team directed by artist Marc Quinn, the Guardian newspaper reported.

"Resident Jen Reid and I have unveiled a new temporary, public installation, ‘A Surge of Power (Jen Reid) 2020’, on top of Edward Colston’s empty plinth in Bristol, England," Quinn said on Instagram beside a photograph of the new work.

Quinn is best known for his statue of pregnant disabled woman Alison Lapper in London's Trafalgar Square.

"I think it's something the people of Bristol really appreciate seeing," Reid told the BBC.

The mayor of Bristol said the future of what should replace Colston should be decided by the people of Bristol, though he said the sculpture of Reid was installed by a London-based artist and no permission was given for it.

But some Bristol residents praised the move.

"There is an element of poetic justice about it," said David Hayes, a 42-year-old resident of the city.

"Replacing it with a protester who stood on the plinth at the time - it's a very powerful image and it's been brilliantly done, I think. So, yeah, hopefully it might stay."