Some stand tall whilst others are seated, one is on horseback as others wave or salute. In all, more than 200 unwanted statues sit in a nondescript park outside Taoyuan City in Taiwan – ranging from life-size to 15-feet tall, in red, brown, blue and white. All of them pay homage to one man: the late dictator, Chiang Kai-shek – a hero, a villain or a mixture of both, depending on the lived experience of who you ask. Taiwan has long been divided over how – if at all – to commemorate the martial law-era leader, and Cihu Memorial Sculpture Park is where many tributes to the generalissimo have ende…