Doris Salcedo turned weapons handed in by Farc guerrillas as part of a peace deal ‘into something useful’ at Bogotá gallery space

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

The weapons once used by Colombian rebels to wage war have been turned into a monument in the country’s capital, as the country grapples with its bloody past.

That deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (or Farc) formally ended 52 years of civil war that left 260,000 dead and over 7 million displaced. Other leftist rebel groups and state-aligned paramilitaries contributed to the bloodshed.

Last year the Farc turned in 37 tonnes of rifles, pistols and grenade launchers which the artist Doris Salcedo has had melted down and recast as tiles that line the floor of a new gallery space just a block from the presidential palace in Bogotá. The work, called Fragments was inaugurated on Monday.

“The idea was to take the weapons which have caused so much pain and turn them into something useful,” said Salcedo, who is best known for her 2007 work Shibboleth which was composed of a long crack across the floor of the turbine hall at the Tate Modern.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Doris Salcedo cleans a spill on the floor during the pre-inauguration of Fragmentos (Fragments). Photograph: Diana Sánchez/AFP/Getty Images

The Bogotá-based artist said she was reluctant to make a traditional monument, referring to her project as an “anti-monument”. “A monument is a way of forgetting something, of making it invisible,” she said. “Weapons and war are not something that should be celebrated.”

The space was built with the help of victims of the conflict, who pounded the steel into the ruptured shape of the tiles. It will host two guest exhibitions every year related to the conflict.

“It was like a catharsis, smashing the hammer into the metal,” Angela María Escobar, who was gang-raped by paramilitaries in 2000, said. “The sound was almost deafening.”

Colombia’s president, Iván Duque, snubbed the inauguration, having declined Salcedo’s invitation. He took office in August this year, having opposed the peace deal on the campaign trail.

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“This place is a testament to the fact that we are not condemned to kill each other,” Salcedo said. “Despite some of the political discourse, we can talk through our problems.”

The Colomban military also assisted with the project, as their foundry is the only one in the country capable of reaching the extreme temperatures required to melt the weapons down.

Other monuments will be erected in Cuba, where the peace negotiations were held, and outside the New York headquarters of the United Nations, which is overseeing the peace process.