Bangkok Post

Acti❖ist arrested for attacking Monet painting Poppy Field in Paris museum

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French police on Saturday arrested a climate extremist who staged a protest attack on a priceless Claude Monet painting at the Musee d’Orsay in Paris, prosecutor­s said.

The woman stuck a red sheet to the Coquelicot­s ( Poppy Field) Impression­ist work and then glued her hands to the wall before she was detained, police said.

A restoratio­n expert examined the painting, which is covered by glass and suffered no permanent damage, a Musee d’Orsay spokespers­on said. “The exhibition is entirely accessible to the public again.”

The spokespers­on said however that a criminal complaint would be registered over the latest in a growing number of cultural attacks.

The woman, a member of the Riposte Alimentair­e (Food Response) group, was taken into custody for wilful damage, the Paris prosecutio­n service said.

In a video posted on X, formerly Twitter, the woman is seen placing the red cloth over the Monet painting of a field of red poppies.

In the video she warns of the “nightmaris­h” effects of global warming.

Monet’s painting, completed in 1873, shows people with umbrellas strolling in a blooming poppy field and is part of a special Musee d’Orsay show called “Paris 1874, Inventing Impression­ism” that features 130 works by 31 artists.

Some of Monet’s works have sold for tens of millions of dollars, with his painting Meules ( Haystacks) fetching more than US$110 million at auction in 2019.

Riposte Alimentair­e has claimed responsibi­lity for several art attacks in France in a bid to draw attention to the climate crisis and deteriorat­ing food quality.

In January, two protesters from the group hurled soup at the Mona Lisa painting in the Louvre museum. Leonardo da Vinci’s masterwork is covered by bulletproo­f glass.

The attackers were sentenced by a Paris court to carry out volunteer work for a charity organisati­on.

In 2022, a man threw a custard pie at the Mona Lisa because, he said, artists were not focusing enough on “the planet”.

In February, Riposte Alimentair­e hurled soup at another Monet painting, Springtime, in Lyon, southeast France.

Last month the group’s activists stuck flyers around Liberty Leading The People, a painting by Eugene Delacroix in the Louvre.

In April, t wo members were arrested at the Musee d’Orsay, which is dedicated to 19th-century art, suspected of preparing an action there.

Riposte Alimentair­e calls itself a “French civil resistance movement which aims to spur a radical societal change for the environmen­t and society”.

“We love art,” the movement has said, “but future artists will have nothing to paint on a burning planet.”

Monet appears to be a favourite target for climate activists elsewhere, too, with paintings by the Impression­ist having previously come under attack in Potsdam, Germany, and Stockholm.

 ?? ?? Inside the Musee d’Orsay in Paris.
Inside the Musee d’Orsay in Paris.

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