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Despicable vandalism

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  • Despicable vandalism

    Thumb screws anyone?



    Link....

    Intruders seriously damage a renowned work by Monet at Paris' Orsay Museum


    PARIS - Intruders entered the Orsay Museum early Sunday and punched a hole in a renowned work by Impressionist painter Claude Monet, "Le Pont d'Argenteuil," the French Culture Minister said.

    A surveillance camera caught a group entering the museum, located on the Left Bank of the French capital along the Seine River and housing a major collection of Impressionist artists like Monet.

    An alarm sounded and the group left, but not before damaging the painting, an aide to Culture Minister Christine Albanel said by telephone.

    No arrests were immediately made.

    Albanel told France-Info radio that the painting could be restored, but she deplored what she said was an attack on "our memory, our heritage."

    "This splendid Monet painting (was) punched right in the middle," the minister said with emotion.

    According to the aide, a 10-centimetre tear was made in the Monet, perhaps with a fist. The official, not authorized to speak publicly of the matter, asked not to be named.

    It was not immediately clear how many people were in the group that broke into the museum.

    Monet led the 19th century Impressionist movement, experimenting notably with light and colour in works now deemed priceless.

    "Le Pont d'Argenteuil" shows a view of the Seine at a rural bend, featuring a bridge and boats.

    Albanel told France-Info that she would doubtless seek improved security in museums and stronger sanctions against those who desecrate art. "This is not tolerable," she said.

    The break-in occurred as Paris held its annual all-night festival, which brings thousands of people into the streets for music, exhibits and fun.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Thumbscrews are too good for them; how about punching a 10 cm hole in each of them?

    Before this collection was moved to the Gare d'Orsay, I saw it at the Jeu de Paume, near the Louvre. I found it a highly emotional experience with all the great masters of Impressionism and those just before and after. In comparison, I didn't feel the same level at either the Louvre or the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. The only other collections that have touched me almost to the same extent are the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC (which incidentally has a priceless portrait by Leonardo not dissimilar to the over-rated Gioconda, aka Mona Lisa) and the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, which must have the widest range of private collections in the world, remarkable especially for Degas. I was also lucky enough to hit Baltimore on one occasion when they had a collection of over 100 Monet paintings borrowed from around the world, including the one that was just damaged. If I remember correctly, they must have had 15 paintings of just the lily pond/Japanese bridge in his garden at Giverny and they certainly had the painting that gave the name to Impressionism, Impressions, Soleil Levant au Havre . They also had five of the Façades of Rouen Cathedral, with different lightings.

    As you may imagine, I have a soft spot for Impressionism and Monet in particular, so deplore this vandalism. The daft thing is that the Gare d'Orsay where it happened is just a stone's throw from the Paris police headquarters!
    Brian (the devil incarnate)

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