The Monument to José María Morelos on the road up to the Chapultepec Castle is a well-known sculpture. It’s placed on a rather sharp bend in the roadway and faces nearly directly south. It’s just a few meters prior to the entrance to the Museo del Caracol.
The figure was cast in bronze by the artist, Ángel Tarrach in 1969. Tarrach (1898-1979) was a successful artist in Barcelona but went into exile in 1939. His nearly 30 years in Mexico also met with success, and his work is still represented in both Spain and in Mexico. His statue of Abraham Lincoln, cast in 1964, actually stands in Ciudad Juárez in the north of Mexico. Tarrach is often mis-attributed as the creator of the sculpture, Abraham Lincoln, The Man, which was a 1966 gift of the U.S. Government. That statue stands in the Parque Lincoln.
The bronze statue is just one of multiple places to stop and rest, if you happen to be climbing to the castle on foot. Click here for a more complete guide to the Chapultepec first section.
Nearest at 0.06 kms.
Nearest at 0.18 kms.
Nearest at 0.21 kms.
One of Chapultepec's more sublime historic homes is a cultural center, too.
A walkway honoring great Mexican poets in Chapultepec . . .
A sculptural monument outside the Casa del Lago in Chapultepec Park . . .
One of the important entranceways to Los Pinos, and thus to the rest of Chapultepec.
A center for the protection of amphibians across the Valley of Mexico.