Climate activists attack Klimt picture

Climate activists have once again campaigned for their cause in a museum in a highly controversial way. This time their goal was a Klimt painting in Vienna.

Activists showered Gustav Klimt’s painting “Death and Life” with black oil.

Vienna Leopold Museum / Reuters

(dpa)

Climate activists have poured oil on a glass-protected painting by Gustav Klimt in Vienna’s Leopold Museum. The group “Last Generation” posted a video on Twitter in which a member hurled the black liquid at the famous work “Death and Life” on Tuesday. One of the activists also stuck his hand to the protective glass.

“Fortunately, the work of art was not damaged,” said the museum’s director, Hans-Peter Wipplinger. Nevertheless, these actions cause damage to the museum scene when he thinks of the worried long-term lenders, says Wipplinger. The activists would have to pay for the cleaning and the deployment of the police, among other things. He expects a five-digit amount.

“This is the wrong way to achieve a rethink in the general public,” Wipplinger continued. If the masterpiece had actually been damaged, the consequences for the activists would be hard to imagine. Just a few days ago, a Klimt painting was sold at an auction in New York for more than 100 million euros.

The activists referred to the Austrian oil and gas group OMV, which supported an open day at the Leopold Museum on Tuesday. “People still exploring and drilling for new oil and gas have blood on their hands – sponsorship can’t wash that away,” they wrote on Twitter. From Wipplinger’s point of view, there is nothing to shake about the cooperation with OMV. Without this support, for example, many visits by school classes would not be possible.

Klimt's painting in undamaged condition.

Klimt’s painting in undamaged condition.

Erich Lessing / Keystone

Climate activists have attacked several famous works of art in European museums since October. Three climate activists were arrested after an attack on the world-famous painting “The Girl with a Pearl Earring” (1665-1667) by Johannes Vermeer in the Dutch Mauritshuis Art Museum. In the Barberini Museum in Potsdam, a man and a woman poured mashed potatoes onto Claude Monet’s painting “Stacks of Grain” (1890), which was protected by a pane of glass. The climate protest group “Last Generation” took responsibility.

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