- 'Nobody can reverse' US progress on clean energy: Biden
- NBA issues fines to Hornets guard Ball, T-Wolves guard Anthony
- Biden allows Ukraine to strike Russia with long-range missiles: US official
- Britain dump out holders Canada to reach BJK Cup semi-finals
- Biden clears Ukraine for missile strikes inside Russia
- Ukrainians brave arduous journeys to Russian-occupied homeland
- Australia not focusing on Grand Slam sweep after thrashing Wales
- Wales's rugby woes -- three talking points
- Jannik Sinner, the atypical Italian star on top of the tennis world
- 'Devil is in the details,' EU chief says of S.America trade deal
- Kusal Mendis defies injury as Sri Lanka beat New Zealand to clinch ODI series
- Gatland would back change after Australia condemn Wales to record defeat
- England rout Ireland to earn Nations League promotion in Carsley farewell
- England secure Nations League promotion, Haaland inspires Norway
- Sinner sweeps past Fritz to win ATP Finals
- Massive Russian air attack pounds Ukraine as 1,000th day of war nears
- Mahrez scores as five-goal Algeria crush Liberia
- Toll in Tanzania building collapse rises to 13, survivors trapped
- 'Red One' tops N.America box office but could end up in the red
- NATO's largest artillery exercise underway in Finland
- Australia condemn Wales to record 11th successive loss in 52-20 rout
- Russian opposition marches against Putin in Berlin
- Ukraine announces power restrictions after 'massive' Russian attack
- Biden begins historic Amazon trip amid Trump climate fears
- Dozens killed, missing in Israeli strike on devastated north Gaza
- Macron defends French farmers in talks with Argentina's Milei
- England players to blame for losing streak says captain George
- 'Emotional' Martin defies Bagnaia to claim first MotoGP world championship
- Slovakia beat Australia to reach BJK Cup semi-finals
- Sluggish Italy fight to narrow win over Georgia
- India and Nigeria renew ties as Modi visits
- Grit and talent, a promise and a dilemma: three things about Jorge Martin
- Martin denies Bagnaia to win first MotoGP world championship
- Typhoon Man-yi weakens as it crosses Philippines' main island
- Noel wins season-opening slalom in Levi as Hirscher struggles
- Tough questions for England as Springboks make it five defeats in a row
- Russia pounds Ukraine with 'massive' attack in 'hellish' night
- McIlroy clinches Race to Dubai title with DP World Tour Championship win
- Glastonbury 2025 tickets sell out in 35 minutes
- 迪拜棕榈岛索菲特美憬阁酒店: 五星級健康綠洲
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: Пятизвездочный велнес-оазис
- New Zealand win revives France on their road to 2027 World Cup
- The Retreat Palm Dubai MGallery by Sofitel: A five-star wellness Oasis
- Israel hits Gaza and Lebanon in deadly strikes
- Power cuts as Russian missiles pound Ukraine's energy grid
- Denmark's Victoria Kjaer Theilvig crowned Miss Universe 2024
- Dutch police use hologram to try and decode sex worker's murder
- Israel bombs south Beirut after Hezbollah targets Haifa area
- Biden in historic Amazon trip as Trump return sparks climate fears
- India hails 'historic' hypersonic missile test flight
Stop 'counterproductive' attacks on famous paintings, says art world
Art world professionals have slammed recent attacks on famous paintings by climate protesters as "counterproductive" and dangerous acts of vandalism.
While some of the major French and British museums interviewed by AFP, including the Louvre, the National Gallery and the Tate in London, are keeping a low profile on the issue, others are calling for stronger protective measures against such acts.
"Art is defenceless and we strongly condemn trying to damage it for whichever cause," the Mauritshuis museum in The Hague said in a statement.
It was in the Mauritshuis that Johannes Vermeer's masterpiece "Girl with a Pearl Earring" was targeted by climate activists this week.
Two activists glued themselves to the painting and adjoining wall, while another threw a thick red substance, but the artwork was behind glass and undamaged, and returned to public view on Friday.
Social media images showed the activists wearing "Just Stop Oil" T-shirts.
"How do you feel?" one of them asked. "This painting is protected by glass but... the future of our children is not protected."
That attack came after environmental activists splashed tomato soup on Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers" at the National Gallery in London, and threw mashed potato over a Claude Monet painting at the Barberini Museum in Potsdam, Germany.
Bernard Blistene, honorary president of the modern art Centre Pompidou in Paris, said all museum managers had been taking precautions against vandalism for a very long time.
"Should we take more? No doubt," he said.
- Ban on bags? -
Ortrud Westheider, director of the Barberini Museum, said the recent attacks showed "international security standards for the protection of artworks in case of activist attacks are not sufficient".
Eco-militants from the Last Generation group hurled mashed potato onto Monet's "Les Meules" (Haystacks) at the museum.
The group later published a video on social media, writing: "If it takes a painting –- with #MashedPotatoes or #TomatoSoup thrown at it -– to make society remember that the fossil fuel course is killing us all: Then we'll give you #MashedPotatoes on a painting!"
The museum said the painting was protected by glass and had not suffered damage.
In a similar stunt on October 14, two environmental protesters hit van Gogh's world-renowned work with tomato soup in London. The gallery said the protesters caused "minor damage" to the frame but the painting was "unharmed".
Remigiusz Plath, security expert for the German museums association DMB and the Hasso Plattner Foundation, said the string of art attacks was "clearly a kind of escalation process".
"There are different ways of reacting and of course all museums have to think about extended security measures -- measures that were previously very unusual for museums in Germany and in Europe, that were perhaps only known in the US," he said.
Such measures could include a complete ban on bags and jackets as well as security searches.
"The environmental catastrophe and the climate crisis are of course also a matter of concern to us... But we have absolutely no tolerance for vandalism," he added.
The Prado museum in the Spanish capital has said it was "on alert".
At the Queen Sofia museum in Madrid, conservation expert Jorge Garcia Gomez-Tejedo told Spanish media this week, only the most vulnerable works are displayed behind armoured glass.
- 'Nihilism' -
Adam Weinberg, of the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, has questioned the activists' approach.
"It's people putting themselves on a stage in order to bring attention to something, but you have to ask, does this really change anything?" he said at a discussion on Wednesday in Qatar, according to ARTNews.
Tristram Hunt, of London's Victoria and Albert Museum, voiced concern at the "nihilistic language around the protests that there is no place for art in times of crisis".
"I don't agree," he said at the same event.
France's Culture minister Rima Abdul Malak has called on "all national museums to redouble their vigilance".
"How can... defending the climate lead to wanting to destroy a work of art? It's absolutely absurd," she told Le Parisien daily.
In May, Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" had a custard pie thrown in her face at the Louvre museum in Paris, but the artwork's thick bulletproof case ensured she came to no harm.
Her attacker said he was taking aim at artists who are not focusing enough on "the planet".
For Didier Rykner, founder of online French magazine La Tribune de l'art, these acts of protest are "counterproductive" and "the more visibility they are given, the more they will do it again".
But "by becoming commonplace, these acts undoubtedly lose their force," he argued.
M.O.Allen--AT