The Manila Times

ACTIVISTS SPLASH SOUP ON GLASS-PROTECTED MONA LISA

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PARIS: Two protesters on Sunday hurled pumpkin soup at the bulletproo­f glass protecting Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” in Paris, demanding the right to “healthy and sustainabl­e food,” an Agence France-Presse (AFP) journalist and the museum said.

The action, which comes as farmers protest across France, is the latest in a string of similar attacks against artworks to demand more action to protect the planet.

Two women on Sunday morning flung streams of orange-colored soup onto the glass, protecting the smiling lady to gasps from the crowd in the French capital’s Louvre museum, an AFP journalist said at the scene.

“What is more important? Art or the right to healthy and sustainabl­e food,” the activists asked, standing in front of the painting and speaking in turn.

“Your agricultur­al system is sick. Our farmers are dying at work,” they said before security staff evacuated the room.

The Paris prosecutor­s’ office said both activists had been detained.

The Louvre said the women had hidden the pumpkin soup in a coffee thermos.

Small quantities of food are allowed inside the museum, though eating is not allowed in the exhibition rooms.

The museum said the artwork had suffered “no damage,” and the room housing the masterpiec­e had re-opened to the public after closing for about an hour.

‘Civil resistance’

A group called Riposte Alimentair­e (“Food counteratt­ack”) claimed responsibi­lity for the stunt.

They said the soup-throwing marked the “start of a campaign of civil resistance with the clear demand ...: social security of sustainabl­e food.”

They referred to a survey of 996 people last year by the Ipsos polling group that found that one in three French people were not always able to afford enough healthy food for three meals a day.

Member Till Van Elst said the group wanted the state to allow people to buy selected food items at reduced rates through a specialize­d social security card. Under the scheme, democratic assemblies would choose the food to be subsidized.

“We want citizens to really be able to decide what is in their plates,” he told AFP.

Culture Minister Rachida Dati criticized the soup attack.

“The Mona Lisa, as our heritage, belongs to future generation­s. No cause can justify targeting it,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

“I’m not sure that the Mona Lisa is the biggest polluter in France,” government spokesman Prisca Thevenot told France 3 television. “What was that about?”

Sunday’s action comes as French farmers have been protesting for days to demand higher prices, lower taxes and looser regulation­s.

The government has been trying to keep discontent among the agricultur­al workers from spreading, months ahead of the European Parliament elections, which are seen as a key test for President Emmanuel Macron’s government.

Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on Sunday scrambled to announce new measures as some farmers threatened to block roads into the capital on Monday.

The action at the museum follows a series of such stunts by climate activists against world-famous paintings to demand more action to phase out fossil fuels and prevent global warming.

In October 2022, two activists from the Just Stop Oil group grabbed headlines when they splashed tomato soup over the glass protecting Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” at the National Gallery in London.

They complained that art lovers were more concerned with paintings than the planet.

 ?? AFPTV IMAGE GRAB VIA AFP ?? ART ATTACK
Two environmen­tal activists from the ‘Riposte Alimentair­e’ (Food Retaliatio­n) group hurl soup at Leonardo da Vinci’s ‘Mona Lisa’ at the Louvre in France’s capital Paris on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024.
AFPTV IMAGE GRAB VIA AFP ART ATTACK Two environmen­tal activists from the ‘Riposte Alimentair­e’ (Food Retaliatio­n) group hurl soup at Leonardo da Vinci’s ‘Mona Lisa’ at the Louvre in France’s capital Paris on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2024.

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