Memorial to the women's rights movement to rise in Hljómskálagarðurinn
A memorial honoring the women's rights movement will be erected in Hljómskálagarðurinn. This monument will strengthen Reykjavík City's identity as a city of equality, honoring the legacy of the Red Stockings movement and women's enduring struggle for equal rights, social justice, and equity.
The project will be developed in collaboration with the representative council of the Reykjavík labor movement, following a letter of intent signed last October. Designed by visual artist Eva Ísleifs, the piece recreates the Venus — also known as the Reconciliation — originally crafted by Jón Benediktsson for Messíana Tómasdóttir's set design in the 1970 production of Lysistrata, directed by Brynja Benediktsdóttir. The statue was borrowed on May 1, 1970, when women in red stockings decided to join the labor movement's protest march in Reykjavík — an event that marked the beginning of the Red Stocking Movement.
Planned for the eastern edge of Hljómskálagarðurinn, the artwork will stand just over two meters tall. A Reykjavík City team featuring representatives from the Reykjavík Art Museum, the Department of Environment & Planning, and the Reykjavík labor movement is managing the project's ongoing development, consulting with other City departments and relevant stakeholders as needed.