I’d rather not. Infact, it just isn’t legal to taxidermy people.
Due to the many rules and regulations regarding human tissue and body disposal, taxidermy of a person will never be an option, at least for now.
Not to mention they would be really difficult to do and look pretty awful. Look at yourself in the mirror and you see any abnormalities immediately, a spot, a puffy eye, wrinkles. Now imagine trying to replicate a person you may have known for 80+ years without immediately seeing something out of place. It doesn’t help that when hairless skin dies, it turns yellow. So all the depths of colour would need to be replaced without looking like a panto villain.
The closest thing you might find is the touring Body Worlds exhibition by Dr. Gunther Von Hagens, famous for his plastination techniques.
Many countries have honoured their dead in different ways for centuries. One of the most taxidermy like traditions are from a community on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island, who dig up their mummified relatives every three years, clean and dress them and surround them with their favourite belongings to honour their spirits.