NewsMonet painting targeted by climate activists at Musée d'Orsay

Monet painting targeted by climate activists at Musée d'Orsay

One of the most famous paintings by French painter Claude Monet has become the target of another climate activist action. An activist stuck a note depicting a fictional landscape showing drought on the work "Poppy Field". The woman was detained, and there is an uproar on social media.

A climate activist taped over a famous painting.
A climate activist taped over a famous painting.
Images source: © X
Mateusz Kaluga

1 June 2024 20:04

The controversial action by climate activists took place at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, where Monet's work can be admired. One of the activists from the ecological movement "Riposte Alimentaire" stuck a note with a fictional landscape on the canvas.

This is what Claude Monet would probably paint in the year 2100 if no radical steps are taken by then to stop climate change, the activists informed on social media.

The activists reported their action themselves by posting a recording. The young woman wore a white T-shirt with the words "4 degrees hell." She covered it with a red canvas, symbolizing the end of our world.

Activists paint a bleak picture

The activists are concerned with climate change and global warming. The movement claims that significant warming could occur by the year 2100 in southern Europe.

It will resemble the Sahara, snow would disappear from the Himalayas, and the monsoon in northern India would be disrupted, significantly impacting agriculture. The list of these blood-curdling examples can be very long - writes Riposte Alimentaire. - No one wants to live in such a world. However, we are heading down this path, especially due to our ecocidal agricultural system.

After Monet's painting was covered, the French authorities responded. The woman was detained, but after an inspection by a conservator, the artwork was rehung.

This movement has a history of similar actions. Activists use these methods to draw attention to the effects of climate change. "Poppy Field" is a work from 1873.

Related content
© Daily Wrap
·

Downloading, reproduction, storage, or any other use of content available on this website—regardless of its nature and form of expression (in particular, but not limited to verbal, verbal-musical, musical, audiovisual, audio, textual, graphic, and the data and information contained therein, databases and the data contained therein) and its form (e.g., literary, journalistic, scientific, cartographic, computer programs, visual arts, photographic)—requires prior and explicit consent from Wirtualna Polska Media Spółka Akcyjna, headquartered in Warsaw, the owner of this website, regardless of the method of exploration and the technique used (manual or automated, including the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence programs). The above restriction does not apply solely to facilitate their search by internet search engines and uses within contractual relations or permitted use as specified by applicable law.Detailed information regarding this notice can be found  here.