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A ‘hospital’ for statues patches up Argentine monuments
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — A headless Anibal Troilo, one of the tango’s greatest performers, rests on a seat holding his concertina. Beside him, tango singer Alberto Castillo smiles, though he lacks arms.
The Argentine musical icons are in a hospital of a sort, where the 2,200 statues and monuments that dot Buenos Aires’ parks and plazas are brought when they have suffered vandalism or decay.
City officials say about 20 pieces arrive each month — often dismembered, broken, sprayed with paint or stolen, either as collector’s items or for scrap metal. Statues are sometimes damaged by angry protesters or toppled by people just for fun.
At the workshop, more than a dozen restorers repair stone and marble, clean away graffiti and mould missing appendages.