Showing posts with label — Wanjiru Njoya (@WanjiruNjoya) December 17. Show all posts
Showing posts with label — Wanjiru Njoya (@WanjiruNjoya) December 17. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

WANJIRU NJOYA: Remember it wasn't just Lee, the destroyers did the same to the statues of Jefferson Davis, Stonewall Jackson, Nathan Bedford Forrest, and many others whose names are less well known.

This statue of Jefferson Davis was given to the National Statuary Hall Collection by Mississippi in 1931. 

Here are the statues of the National Statuary Hall Collection.  from Architect of the Capitol.  

And this is Stonewall Jackson, also in a museum. They hacked the statue to pieces and displayed it thus 👇

Thank you to Wanjiru Njoya. 

What happened was that artist Kara Walker was commissioned to deconstruct the Southern heroes and men into grotesque abstractions. The statue of Thomas Stonewall Jackson looked like this in 1921.

It's called the Equestrian statue of Stonewall Jackson in Jacksonville, Virginia, 1921.  It is an absolute gorgeous statue of one of America's great generals.  

Kevin Levin explains,
Artist Kara Walker is using the decommissioned bronze equestrian statue of Confederate general Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson from Charlottesville, Virginia, as material for a new art installation. The work, titled Unmanned Drone (2023–2025), is the centerpiece of a major exhibition in Los Angeles called   MONUMENTS.  The Stonewall Jackson monument was dedicated in 1921. It was taken down by the city in 2021 after years of controversy. The Los Angeles non-profit, The Brick (formerly LAXART), acquired the monument.

Kevin Levin in his "Beheading of Stonewall Jackson," Cites the NYT who quotes Walker,  
The first step in the process, she said, was ‘a really kind of gruesome beheading’ of the Jackson figure that she said left her unsettled. Though some people present applauded as the head came off, she said, ‘I actually felt like it was such a violent act that I was really uncomfortable with it.’ But she felt there was no alternative: ‘I knew that what I was going to do was going to involve not having the head in its right place.’ 

These Marxists are true monsters.

About Lost Cause, Levin says, "The artist has transformed the object's original intent, subverting its heroic “Lost Cause” narrative."  Can you imagine?  Rewriting a warrior's, a nation's, and sacrifices his men made as all wrong in their pursuit of the war?  I'm sure that canard started before that last rifle was fired in 1865.