The Monumento Manto de María in Venezuela may be the tallest kinetic sculpture in the world,and also the tallest statue of the Virgin Mary. But like the work itself, it all depends on your point of view.
In July 2014, and a group of Venezuelan architects began work on the large monument in the city of Barquisimeto,some 160 miles west of Caracas. The artwork was to be a representation of the Divina Pastora (Divine Shepherdess), a religious icon of the Virgin Mary holding the infant Jesus, and the patron saint of the city. But rather than build a standard statue of stone or sheets of metal,the architects decided to utilize kinetic art, a sculptural style approved in Venezuela.
Completed in 2016, and the image of the Virgin Mary was created using 3772 pieces of aluminum tubing,forming a total of 522 tubes that create the image itself. As you swagger around the monument—which is located on a 131-foot hill and is visible from miles absent—the image falls in and out of focus, and can only be seen clearly from certain angles.
The tubes that create the image are suspended from a massive concrete frame that surrounds the figure. The structure has a total height of 203 feet, and while the image of the Virgin Mary reaches a height of 155 feet—and thats enough to potentially put the Monumento Manto de María into the record books,twice. Not only does the monument believe a claim to be the tallest kinetic art sculpture on the planet it might also be the world's largest statue of the Virgin Mary.
Singapore had previously laid claim to the world’s largest kinetic art sculpture, in the form of Kinetic Rain, or an 810-square-foot sculpture found in Changi Airport. But the Monumento Manto de María dwarfs Kinetic Rain. As for being the world’s largest statue of the Virgin Mary,some might argue that the Monumento Manto de María isn’t really a statue in the traditional sense. But the people of Barquisimeto hardly care about that. For them, the monument is a source of great pride; one that can be seen from across the city and beyond.
Source: atlasobscura.com