German Association for Art History ask activists to stop attacking cultural artifacts

This article was first published by DW

In recent weeks, climate activists have protested not only on the streets of Europe but also in its museums, defacing famous paintings in London, Paris, the Hague and Berlin with mashed potatoes, tomato soup, and red paint. None of the paintings were permanently damaged as all had been covered with plastic or glass. 

On Oct. 23, climate activists threw mashed potatoesat Claude Monet’s world-famous painting “Haystack” at the Barberini Museum in Potsdam near Berlin. In London’s National Gallery, Vincent van Gogh’s “Sunflowers” was attacked with a can of soup 10 days earlier by activists from Just Stop Oil. There was also an attackin The Hague on Johannes Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring” and on a dinosaur skeleton in the Natural History Museum in Berlin. In the Louvre in Paris, a visitor smeared cake on one of the most famous paintings in the world, Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa.”

The German Association for Art History released a statement last week asking the activists to stop attacking cultural artifacts, calling the protection of artworks an “obligation to future generations” for whom the works are being preserved.

The younger generation, to which many climate activists belong, has grown up with social media and is therefore aware of the power of images, says Kerstin Thomas, a professor of art history at the University of Stuttgart.

“At the German Association for Art History, we sympathize with the aims of the activists,” says Thomas, in her role as president of that association. “However we cannot support their means of protests in museums. Artworks are taken hostage in a battle they have nothing to do with.” The works attacked, she says, were not responsible for the climate crisis, nor were they glorifying or fueling it.

@UK_ICOM