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Controversial painting by Swiss artist vandalised at Paris museum

Swiss painter MIRIAM CAHN
“This painting deals with the way in which sexuality is used as a weapon of war, as a crime against humanity,” says Swiss painter Miriam Cahn. Keystone / Oliver Berg

French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday condemned an "act of vandalism" after a controversial painting by Swiss artist Miriam Cahn, on display at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, was vandalised with paint on Sunday.

The painting entitled “Fuck abstraction!”, on display since mid-February, shows a person with their hands tied behind their back being forced to perform oral sex on a faceless, powerful man.

Critics have said the victim in the painting depicts a child, which Cahn has denied, claiming it is a representation of rape as a weapon of war and crime against humanity.

Several children’s rights groups had denounced the painting as child pornography, calling for it to be withdrawn. But their bid to have it removed was rejected in the French courts.

The Palais de Tokyo modern art museum said a man “deliberately degraded” Miriam Cahn’s work on Sunday by throwing purple paintExternal link at it, adding it would file a complaint for damage to property and obstruction of freedom of expression.

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The man, described as elderly, according to a source close to the case, was “unhappy with the sexual portrayal of a child and an adult presented in the painting” but was not affiliated with an activist group, it said.

He “was immediately apprehended by security agents… and taken away by police”, the museum said, adding it would file a complaint for damage to property and obstruction of freedom of expression.

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Cultural Minister Rima Abdul Malak said in a statement that the artwork, as presented in this context, had been approved to be presented to the public by the justice system. 

“In agreement with the artist, the Palais de Tokyo will continue to present the painting and the exposition,” which has attracted 80,000 visitors, “with traces of the damage until the end of the season, May 14,” it said in a statement.

The artist has rejected criticism of the work, in a statement issued by the museum in March.

“They are not children,” Cahn insisted. “This painting deals with the way in which sexuality is used as a weapon of war, as a crime against humanity,” she added.

France’s highest administrative court, the Conseil d’EtatExternal link, in April dismissed a legal bid to have the painting taken down.

Given that the painting was on show in an art gallery “accompanied by detailed contextual information, it does not seriously or clearly unlawfully harm the best interests of the child or the dignity of the human person”, it ruled.

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