Los Angeles Times

Brazilians find bull unbearable

Amid outcry, the Wall St.-inspired sculpture outside the stock exchange is removed a week after its arrival.

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SAO PAULO, Brazil — Many Brazilians felt bearish about the new Wall Streetinsp­ired bull sculpture outside the stock exchange, and didn’t have to wait long for it to crash: The statue has been removed a week after it was installed.

Sao Paulo’s stock exchange had hoped to bestow the run-down city center with a flashy landmark. But its golden sheen was offset by nearby tents for the homeless and the daily line outside a major trade union of people searching for jobs — any job.

By Tuesday night, it was gone.

Critics said the metaland-fiberglass sculpture at the gates of the stock exchange in no way reflects Brazil’s current economic crossroads or near-term prospects, with poverty and unemployme­nt high and inflation running in the double digits. Local media have shown poor Brazilians in several cities so desperate for food that they rummage through rejected meat scraps.

“It represents the strength and the resilience of the Brazilian people,” Gilson Finkelszta­in, the stock exchange’s chief executive, said at its Nov. 16 unveiling. It was sponsored by the exchange and investor Paulo Spyer.

Spyer, who owns a consultanc­y firm named Vai Tourinho (“Go Little Bull” in Portuguese), said he was honored to give “a gift to all Brazilians.” Some locals were keen to snap pictures with the sculpture, which resembles the Charging Bull in Manhattan’s financial district.

But celebratio­n was swiftly met with protests. The next day, a dozen students posted stickers that read “HUNGER” on the bull’s body. After their removal, the nonprofit group SP Invisible, which aids the poor, organized a barbecue beside the bull to feed homeless people. Both demonstrat­ions reverberat­ed widely on social media.

“This bull is suggesting we are experienci­ng some progress, but it is the exact opposite,” Vinícius Lima, one of the nonprofit’s organizers, told journalist­s. “Beef prices have skyrockete­d. It costs double what it used to. Fewer and fewer Brazilians can afford it. That’s why we came here.”

Over the weekend, the bull’s sponsors attempted to co-opt demonstrat­ions by asking visitors to bring food for donation. Still, the bull continued getting roasted.

City Hall’s urban planning body summoned the sculpture’s sponsors and the artist who crafted it for a meeting. Its main objection with the golden beast was that sponsors didn’t seek approval beforehand and it apparently violated a law limiting what can be displayed outdoors. Sao Paulo limits outdoor advertisin­g.

“There is a law and it must be followed. Everyone has to be aware of the law before doing something,” Viviane

Rubio, an advisor to the urban planning body, said during Tuesday’s afternoon meeting. “You needed to let us know before you placed it there.”

The bull’s creator, artist and architect Rafael Brancatell­i, expressed contrition.

“I wasn’t trying to be disrespect­ful or go over anyone’s head. The lesson has been learned,” he said.

“In another initiative, we will certainly look for you first.”

Under orders from Sao Paulo’s stock exchange, a crane took away the bull Tuesday night, its head and horns wrapped in plastic.

Maria Gomes, who has worked in the region 30 years, said Wednesday she was pleased by the removal of the sculpture, which she initially thought was an ad for a barbecue restaurant and had deemed “hideous.” Still, she felt the bull may have been unfairly blamed.

“It was a ‘scapebull,’ ” said Gomes, 67. “Now that it is gone, it feels better. But it is actually the same degraded city center of years ago.”

 ?? Andre Penner Associated Press ?? ACTIVISTS last week paste a sign with the Portuguese word for “hunger” on a bull sculpture, since ousted, near the stock exchange in Sao Paulo. Many objected to the statue’s incongruit­y given Brazil’s economic woes.
Andre Penner Associated Press ACTIVISTS last week paste a sign with the Portuguese word for “hunger” on a bull sculpture, since ousted, near the stock exchange in Sao Paulo. Many objected to the statue’s incongruit­y given Brazil’s economic woes.

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