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Too racy for the Louvre, sex sculpture finds home at the Pompidou Center

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PARIS — In the end it was just too kinky for the Louvre.

The world’s most visited museum shied away from displaying a sculpture that some have labeled as too sexually explicit, but the nearby Pompidou Center last week decided the world needed to decide for itself. Standing 12 meters tall, Domestikat­or, a creation from Dutch artist Joep van Lieshout, was originally expected to stand in the 13th century Tuileries Gardens adjacent to Paris’s Louvre museum as part of a contempora­ry art fair this month.

But the geometric sculpture, showing a red human figure appearing to penetrate a four-legged creature, was perhaps just a little too imposing for the home of French art.

“I was surprised first of all, and then of course disappoint­ed, because it ( Louvre Museum) couldn’t show the art work,” van Lieshout told Reuters TV, adding that he had never intended to elicit a sexual interpreta­tion.

” I couldn’t explain my ideas to ( the) larger public,” he said of the Louvre’s decision to pull out.

Local media said the Louvre had made its decision after a barrage of negativity on social media and fears that it would not be received in such a public place.

The piece, made of steel, wood and fiberglass, is now on show in the esplanade outside the high-tech architectu­ral building of the Pompidou Center.

“Obscene, pornograph­ic? Well, obscenity is everywhere, pornograph­y, sadly, is everywhere, certainly not in this work of art,” said Bernard Blistene, director of the Pompidou Center Museum.

“This work of art is funny, it is an obvious nod to the relationsh­ip of abstractio­n and figurative painting that coexist in Dutch art in the 20th century. Spiritual yes, obscene no.”

Already displayed for three years in Bochum, Germany, the sculpture had not courted any controvers­y until now.

Van Lieshout insisted that his work defined the domesticat­ion of animals by humans for agricultur­e and industry as well as highlighti­ng the ethical issues surroundin­g that.

“I don’t think it’s very sexually explicit. I mean, I don’t know what I can do to make it less sexually explicit,” he said.

It’s not the first time the Internatio­nal Contempora­ry Art Fair (FIAC) has been at the center of an artistic sex scandal in Paris. In 2014, vandals attacked a giant green inflatable sculpture in one of the capital’s most famous squares after its resemblanc­e to a sex toy sparked an outcry.

At the time Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said the incident was an unacceptab­le attack on artistic freedom.

“I can understand that it can shock some people, because it’s true, it’s bound to be linked to bestiality, this kind of thing ,” Marketing student Colombe Gaucherand said after looking over Domestikat­or.

“But it’s artistic freedom and I think we shouldn’t censor a work of art even if it doesn’t appeal to everyone.” —

 ??  ?? DUTCH ARTIST Joep van Lieshout poses in front of his sculpture Domestikat­or near the Center Pompidou modern art museum, also known as Beaubourg, in Paris, France, on Oct. 17, after the Louvre Museum cancelled plans to exhibit the controvers­ial...
DUTCH ARTIST Joep van Lieshout poses in front of his sculpture Domestikat­or near the Center Pompidou modern art museum, also known as Beaubourg, in Paris, France, on Oct. 17, after the Louvre Museum cancelled plans to exhibit the controvers­ial...

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