Macedonia’s Alexander Deemed “Too Big”
Skopje | 07 May 2009 |
The size and cost of the Alexander the Great statue planned for Skopje’s central square, as well as the lack of transparency on the part of the authorities over its commissioning, has provoked a series of attacks on the proposal.
“I wonder why a monument of this size? Maybe for the Greeks in Athens to see that we too have an Alexander of our own,” well-known sculptor Blagoja Cuskov told the Utrinski Vesnik daily.
Rumours about the statues have swirled in the past few months. But details of the form, size and commissioning were only released earlier this week after the Dnevnik newspaper published documents it had received about their construction.
Following the publication of the article, the mayor of Skopje's central municipality was forced to disclose details about the statues.
But while he confirmed that the central government will pay for them, the ministry of culture has since remained silent.
The statue of Alexander the Great is scheduled to be erected by the end of next year.
Some commentators say that the sheer number of monuments that are currently being planned, without any prior public debate or quality control, can potentially harm the city's public space.




The issue of national identity is taken seriously by Balkan people – including the least serious among them.













2009-05-07 14:47:06