Climate Activists Target, And Fail To Glue Themselves To, Munch’s Iconic ‘Scream’—Here Are All The Recent Protests Targeting Masterpieces

Topline

Two climate activists in Norway attempted to glue their hands to the frames of Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” on Friday—the latest iconic artwork targeted by protesters in a series of vandalism that activists hope will bring attention to climate change—although their tactics have generated condemnation from the art world.

Key Facts

The protest at the National Museum of Norway in the capital city Oslo was led by activists from the Norwegian climate activist group Stopp Oljeltinga (Stop Oil Exploration), which said their intention was to “pressure lawmakers into stopping oil exploration” the Associated Press reported—in a press release, museum officials said the activists were apprehended by guards and the painting was not damaged.

Last week, two protesters, who are part of an activist organization Extinction Rebellion, glued their hands to Francisco Goya’s “The Naked Maja” and “The Clothed Maja”, writing on the wall of Madrid’s Prado Museum “1.5 [degrees Celsius]

,” a reference to the monumental goal laid out in the Paris Climate Agreement of curbing global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century—museum officials condemned the protest and said it caused “slight blemishes” to the frames but no damage to the paintings themselves.

They’re the latest iconic paintings targeted in recent climate protests, starting with Leonardo da Vinci’s infamous “Mona Lisa,” which a climate change protester smeared with cake in March before being tackled by security at Paris’ Louvre museum and arrested, reportedly yelling “there are people who are destroying the planet,” according to a translation by The Art Newspaper.

In July, protesters glued their hands to 15th century Renaissance painter Sandro Botticelli’s “Primavera” in Florence, Italy, calling the pro a “new season of actions.”

Two activists were arrested after they doused Vincent van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” (1887) in tomato soup on October 17, while gluing their hands to the wall beneath it, causing no damage to the painting but renewing widespread criticism that the protest, with posts on Twitter calling it “repugnant” and “beyond stupid.”

On October 23, German climate activists threw mashed potatoes at Claude Monet’s $110 million painting “Mueles” (1890)—museum officials said the painting was not damaged, while the two activists with the climate activism organization Letzte Generation were taken to jail, the group announced.

Four days later, three activists were arrested at the Mauritshuis museum in The Hague, in the Netherlands, when a man wearing a “Just Stop Oil” T-t-shirt attempted to glue his hand to 17th century Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer’s iconic “Girl With A Pearl Earring” while another poured tomato soup on the painting.

On Friday, four activists with the group Ultima Generazione threw pea soup at van Gogh’s 1888 painting “The Sower” at the Palazzo Bonaparte museum in Rome, and while museum officials said the painting’s glass screen protected it from any damages, Italy’s Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano condemned it, saying culture shouldn’t be “used as a megaphone for other forms of protest.”

Contra

Activists, however, have argued the devastating effects scientists predict climate change will have outweighs the damage a priceless painting might incur in the protests. Phoebe Plummer, one of the activists who threw soup on van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” asked in a statement, “is art worth more than life? More than food? More than justice?” adding “we will look back and mourn all we have lost unless we act immediately.” For years, scientists have warned unchecked climate change caused by increased fossil fuel emissions will have a catastrophic effect on the planet. Last month, a U.N. report warned that under current conditions the world’s temperature will increase as much as 2.9 degrees Celsius by the end of the century—almost double the targeted 1.5 degree rise in the Paris Climate Agreement. “Everything that we would have the right to see in our present and our future is being obscured by a real and imminent catastrophe, just as this pea puree has covered” activists with Last Generation said.

Crucial Quote

A video posted online by the Spanish activist group Extinction Rebellion Granada showed the protesters gluing their hands to the paintings as museum officials approached, tweeting “1.5 [degrees Celsius] has died yet long live The Majas, of course. We will drown but [The Majas paintings] will still be there to remind us how well it was lying while the collapse comes.”

Further Reading

Climate Activist Arrested After Gluing His Head To ‘Girl With A Pearl Earring’ Painting (Forbes)

Pea Soup Thrown At Another Van Gogh Painting As Climate Activists Target Famous Art (Forbes)

German Climate Activists Throw Mashed Potatoes At $110 Million Monet Painting (Forbes)

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brianbushard/2022/11/11/climate-activists-target-and-fail-to-glue-themselves-to-munchs-iconic-scream-here-are-all-the-recent-protests-targeting-masterpieces/