November 10, 2024

Protesters hurl soup at Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa in Paris

Mona Lisa #MonaLisa

Two protesters have hurled soup at the bulletproof glass protecting Leonardo da Vinci’s iconic painting, the Mona Lisa, in Paris’s Louvre museum.

The act of vandalism on Sunday, which came as French farmers protested across the country, was the latest in a string of similar attacks against artworks to demand more action to protect the planet.

On Sunday morning, local time, two women flung streams of red and orange soup onto the glass protecting the painting, sparking gasps from bystanders.

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

Protesters splattered the glass protecting the Mona Lisa with soup. AP

“Your agricultural system is sick. Our farmers are dying at work,” they added, before security staff placed black screens in front of them and evacuated the room.

A group called Riposte Alimentaire, which translates as “Food Counterattack”, claimed responsibility for the stunt.

In a statement sent to AFP, it said the soup throwing marked the “start of a campaign of civil resistance with the clear demand … of the social security of sustainable food”.

The protesters threw the food product on the masterpiece in order to raise awareness about food instability. AP

The action comes amid days of protests from French farmers, who are demanding better pay, taxes and regulations.

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

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

This protest is one of many acts defacing artworks to raise awareness about world issues. AP Custard pie

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 of 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 painting Sunflowers at the National Gallery in London.

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

The Mona Lisa has been attacked several times before. A man threw a custard pie at her in May of 2022, also saying artists were not focusing enough on “the planet”. Her thick glass casing ensured she came to no harm.

She has been behind the glass since a Bolivian man threw a rock at her all the way back in December of 1956, damaging her left elbow.

The glass was made bulletproof in 2005.

In 2009, a woman threw an empty teacup at the painting, which slightly scratched the case.

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