Elon Musk is almost angelic.
A statue of a winged Elon Musk is called "Exile and Escape." Musk carries a collection of weapons and armour, each of which is tied to one of his many ventures. On his hip, he carries a Boring Company "not-a-flamethrower."
He also appears to be pulling an arrow labeled "AI" from his thigh.
Musk has often voiced his grave, often sensational fears about the advent of super-intelligent artificial intelligence, or AI.
Read more: Elon Musk believes AI could turn humans into an endangered species like the mountain gorilla
Amazon CEO and world's richest man Jeff Bezos cuts an imposing figure in "The Corporate Nation."
Bezos is mounted, brandishing a spear and clutching an Amazon package, in the style of an equestrian statue. His horse appears to be trampling on yet more packages, in a reminder that Bezos' empire is built on commerce. You can also see a prostrate human being trampled by the horse.
It's not immediately clear what the man being trampled is meant to signify. He may be an allegorical representation of an Amazon worker, as Bezos has repeatedly come under fire for making his fortune off their low-paid labour and poor working conditions, most notably from presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders.
The artist used lots of photos of Bezos to model him.
It looks like Errazuriz opted for the older, "swole" Bezos rather than the younger, nerdier-looking Jeff Bezos.
Bezos has a liking for horses in real life.
Bezos heralded the beginning of 2019 by riding into a cowboy apparel store on a horse.
This bust of Mark Zuckerberg is pointedly titled "The New Opium."
Mark Zuckerberg's bust is garlanded with poppy seeds, which are the main ingredient in opium and heroin. This seems to be a reference to the frequent criticism that social media is addictive.
The bust is reminiscent of the Roman emperor Augustus, with whom Zuckerberg is fascinated.
Zuckerberg even named one of his daughters, August, after the emperor.
Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin appear together in a statue called "The Great Oracle."
That's presumably a reference to the fact that you can, theoretically, find almost any information on Google.
Apple cofounder Steve Jobs appears as "The Prophet."
Jobs' pose is highly reminiscent of Auguste Rodin's famous sculpture, "The Thinker", which shows a man similarly cross-legged and thoughtful — although without a phone in hand. Errazuriz told Wired in December that Jobs is"evangelizing everyone."
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden appears in "The Collapse of the Resistance."
Snowden is laid out on a slab, reminiscent of a memorial.
Snowden famously leaked a huge cache of confidential the US National Security Agency (NSA), revealing the extent to which America and its allies tap internet and phone communications. He fled to Russia and, as far as anyone knows, still lives there after being indicted by the US Department of Justice in 2013.