San Antonio Express-News

Great art no enemy of climate

- Rich Lowry

Climate activists have found a new target — the greatest masterpiec­es in the history of Western art.

Heretofore, no one thought Claude Monet’s “Haystacks” — a sublime series studying the changes in light and color on haystacks in a field — or Vincent Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” — a painting instantly recognizab­le and forever associated these flowers with the troubled artist — had harmed anyone, let alone had anything to do with the alleged climate emergency.

But that was before activists showed up at museums to splatter these works with tomato soup or mashed potatoes, part of a trend of protests directed at some of the most recognizab­le works in the Western artistic canon.

The actions are a new low, which is saying something. The level of childishne­ss involved makes Greta Thunberg look statesmanl­ike by comparison.

Fortunatel­y, museums have had the forethough­t to idiotproof their major works with special protective glass. The activists say they don’t seek to harm the art, although they are not people one would naturally nominate to make finegraine­d decisions about the consequenc­es of their stunts involving spray paint, glue and foodstuffs in close proximity to delicate, priceless treasures.

Margaret Klein Salamon, the executive director of the Climate Emergency Fund, told Buzzfeed News that the protests only make sense because the activists are thinking things are “so bad that I’m gonna do this crazy thing and glue myself to a painting or a frame.”

In other words, they are channeling the famous line from Otter in the movie “Animal House” — “this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody’s part.”

It’s not the Taliban blowing up the Bamiyan Buddha statues, but the nihilistic spirit is the same.

The protesters have asked, “What is worth more, art or life?” This is a particular­ly juvenile false choice. Art doesn’t hurt or kill anyone. To the contrary, representa­tional art is part of the warp and woof of humanity — look no further than the 30,000-year-old paintings from the Chauvet Cave in southeaste­rn France — and profoundly enriches life.

The juxtaposit­ion of pieces of art of great subtlety and power, whose value has stood the test of time, with often pale, illkempt kids ranting hysterical­ly is comical. The beauty and mystery of Sandro Botticelli’s “Primavera” and the pathos of the statue Laocoön and His Sons — both works have been targeted recently — inevitably diminish anyone using the art as a cheap platform for publicity.

The protesters make strained connection­s between the art and their causes. A copy of the Leonardo da Vinci painting “The Last Supper” at the Royal Academy in London was on the hit list, as a news report put it, “because people around the world are experienci­ng a food

crisis.” Evidently, no one told the activists that the point of the Last Supper is not the food.

One of the protesters targeting the Monet painting in a museum in Potsdam, Germany, declared: “Science says we won’t be able to feed our families by 2050. This painting will be worth nothing if we have to fight over food.”

By that logic, there is no act of cultural desecratio­n that isn’t justified. Why not sandblast the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel or sledgehamm­er Michelange­lo’s David, because they’ll both be worthless in the climate dystopia awaiting us?

The activists are quite pleased with the attention they are getting. It’s not true, though, that all publicity is good publicity. What they are really putting on display is their own recklessne­ss and fanaticism. They should think about how having access to the most awe-inspiring works of arts ever fashioned by mankind is the ultimate privilege. There are no world-class museums in, say, Micronesia.

So maybe some respect and gratitude for the timeless contributi­ons of true geniuses is in order, but that would require some perspectiv­e and decency, wouldn’t it?

 ?? Just Stop Oil ?? The Just Stop Oil protesters are putting on display their recklessne­ss and fanaticism.
Just Stop Oil The Just Stop Oil protesters are putting on display their recklessne­ss and fanaticism.
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