Climate activists, who have been targeting artworks in recent months, have now disrupted an orchestra concert at Hamburg's Elbphilharmonie concert hall by gluing themselves to the conductor's podium.
Advertisement
In recent months, climate activists have certainly gotten the world's attention, whether pelting masterpieces by Van Gogh and Monet with soup or mashed potatoes, or gluing themselves to picture frames. And that's exactly how this young generation of environmental activists has intended it to be.
The latest culture-related demonstration occurred in Hamburg's Elbphilharmonie concert hall on the evening of November 23.
Just as the Sächsische Staatskapelle was about to begin its concert, two climate activists from Germany's "Letzte Generation" (Last Generation) movement walked onto the stage and glued themselves to the conductor's podium. They began calling for resistance to what they saw as the German government's indecisive climate policy.
A video shared on the group's Twitter feed shows the two activists wearing safety vests and coming onto the stage where they then superglued themselves to a rail of the conductor's podium.
"Just as there is only one violin concerto by Beethoven, we have only this one planet whose boundaries we disregard so much that climate-related disasters are becoming more frequent and deadly," one of the activists said while on stage.
They also pointed out that if water levels continue to rise, the Elbphilharmonie itself, which sits on Hamburg's port, would be under threat.
German news agency dpa reported that the pair were detached from the railing after a short time and were taken into custody.
Advertisement
Not the first incident
In recent weeks, climate activists around Europe have been targeting prominent artworks to get their message about environmental protection across.
The masterpieces targeted by climate activists
From Claude Monet's "Haystack" to Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers," priceless art is being attacked to highlight the climate emergency. The activists are facing penalties.
Image: LETZTE GENERATION ÖSTERREICH/dpa/picture alliance
Peter Paul Rubens' 'Massacre of the Innocents'
At the end of August, two men in Munich glued themselves to a Rubens painting. Museum staff and police used solvents to separate the activists from the 17th-century frame. It was damaged, as was the wall covering, with damage amounting to €11,000 ($11,400), according to the public prosecutor's office. On November 17, the district court issued a penalty order.
In Vienna's Leopold Museum on November 15, climate activists from the group Last Generation spilled oil on Gustav Klimt's painting "Death and Life," which is covered by a protective glass. Despite tight controls at the entrance, the activists managed to smuggle the liquid into the museum by wearing a hot-water bottle under their clothing. The museum is still assessing potential damage.
Image: LETZTE GENERATION ÖSTERREICH/dpa/picture alliance
Andy Warhol's 'Campbell's Soup Cans'
At the beginning of November, activists from the group Stop Fossil Fuel Subsidies sprayed letters on the glass covering prints from Andy Warhol's iconic "Campbell's Soup Cans" series, which is on show at the National Gallery of Australia in Canberra. An activist shouted, "We're in a climate emergency" before gluing a hand to the glass. The pop-art piece was cleaned and later rehung.
Image: Stop FF Subsidies
Francisco Goya's 'La maja vestida' and 'La maja desnuda'
On November 5, activists glued themselves to the frames of two classic paintings by Francisco Goya at the Prado Museum in Madrid. The activists drew "+1.5°C" on the museum wall, referring to the Paris climate agreement's target for limiting global heating. The group Futuro Vegetal (Plant Future) claimed responsibility, stating that "the UN recognized the impossibility" of keeping to the target.
Image: Extinction Rebellion/AFP
Claude Monet's 'Haystacks'
Two young activists from the German group Last Generation threw mashed potato liquid at Claude Monet's "Haystacks" at the Museum Barberini in Potsdam near Berlin. The Monet was protected by a glass frame. "People are starving, people are freezing, people are dying. We are in a climate catastrophe," said one of the activists.
Image: Last Generation/ABACA/picture alliance
Vincent van Gogh's 'Sunflowers'
Also in October, two women threw tomato soup from Heinz cans onto Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers" to protest the climate crisis. They then glued their hands to the gallery wall. As with all of these actions, the oil painting itself was not harmed thanks to a glass protective case, though the protesters were arrested and later charged.
Image: Victoria Jones/PA Wire/picture alliance
John Constable's 'The Hay Wain'
Just Stop Oil activists covered English painter John Constable's 1821 work, "The Hay Wain," with a color printout showing the idyllic river landscape replaced by a paved road, dead trees, factory smokestacks and airplanes. The work was partly chosen because an art restorer advised the activists that it had the requisite layers of paint and lacquer to withstand a light adhesive.
Image: CARLOS JASSO/AFP
Leonardo da Vinci's 'The Last Supper'
It might have only been a copy of da Vinci's priceless masterpiece on display at The Royal Academy in London, but during a July action, activists affixed themselves to the frame of the vast canvas imitation of "The Last Supper." Just for Oil's Simon Bramwell told DW that the work was chosen because it resonates with "crop failure" and increasing malnutrition linked to climate change.
Image: James Manning/PA Wire/empics/picture alliance
Ancient statue of the priest 'Laocoon'
Two members of the Italian climate activist group Ultima Generazione (Last Generation) glued themselves to the ancient statue of the priest "Laocoon" at the Vatican Museums. The priest warned his fellow Trojans against taking in the wooden horse left by the Greeks outside the city gates. Similarly, the appeals of today's climate scientists also fall on deaf ears, the activists told DW.
Image: Last Generation
Johannes Vermeer's 'Girl With a Pearl Earring'
Belgian activists with Just Stop Oil, aiming to end new fossil fuel projects, targeted a masterwork by Dutch Golden Age painter Johannes Vermeer in late October in The Hague. One person glued their hands to the "Girl With a Pearl Earring," which is behind glass, another to the adjoining wall, while a third threw soup at the work. Last week, two activists received two-month jail sentences.
Image: Peter Dejong/AP/picture alliance
10 images1 | 10
On November 21, activists poured orange paint over the US artist Charles Ray's "Horse and Rider" statue in Paris. They placed a shirt on the rider which read "We have 858 days left," which refers to the three-year time limit for reducing CO2 emissions.
Earlier this month, two climate activists poured oil over a Gustav Klimt painting "Death and Life" (1908-15) at the Leopold Museum in Vienna. One glued his hand to the picture's frame in protest.
Such methods which make use of art as their medium are indeed gaining global attention.
German art magazine Monopol included the climate activists in its annual list of the 100 actors it judges to be most important in the contemporary art world, listing them in the 19th position.
Monopol said it did not always agree with their tactics but concluded that the activists "emphasize the value of art for society."
Ranking first in the list is art activist Nan Goldin, while the Indonesian art collective Ruangrupa, which curated the controversial 2022 Documenta art show, is placed in second position.