Selangor Journal
The United Kingdom’s Princess Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, views Girl with a Pearl Earring by Johannes Vermeer during a visit to the Mauritshuis in The Hague, Netherlands, on October 11, 2016. — Picture by REUTERS

Activists who targeted Vermeer painting sentenced to prison

AMSTERDAM, Nov 4 — The two climate change activists who targetted the iconic ‘Girl With A Pearl Earring’ painting by Johannes Vermeer have been sentenced to two months in prison by a Dutch court.

A viral video shared online showed two activists with the group Just Stop Oil Belgium glueing themselves to the artwork as one poured a can of tomato soup on the other’s head. A third activist filmed the stunt.

The oil painting, among the most recognisable in the world, was painted by Vermeer in 1665 amid the Dutch Golden Age in the broader Baroque era and features a girl looking over her left shoulder with a large pearl earring in yellow and blue hues. It is protected by glass at the Hague’s Mauritshuis Museum.

The Netherlands Prosecution Service said in a statement that two activists were sentenced by the court to two months in prison, of which half of the sentence was suspended, meaning the men will serve one month.

The third activist will appear in court on Friday after he did not agree to expedited court proceedings.

In the video, one of the men asked onlookers, “How do you feel when you see something beautiful and priceless being apparently destroyed before your eyes?

“Do you feel outraged? Good. Where is that feeling when you see the planet being destroyed before our very eyes?”

The prosecutors had demanded four-month sentences, saying they wanted to send a message that “paintings hang in museums to be enjoyed, not exploited for activist ends”.

The right to demonstrate is a fundamental right, but not unlimited. The hard limit is when it comes to committing criminal offences, prosecutors said.

The painting was not damaged and was put back on display the next day, according to a statement from the Mauritshuis Museum.

However, the 19th-century frame that the painting was displayed in was damaged.

“We are incredibly grateful that the Girl remained undamaged and is back in her familiar spot so quickly. So that our visitors from all over the world can admire her again, which is what art is for,” Martine Gosselink, general director of the Mauritshuis Museum, said.

Vermeer’s work was examined in the museum’s conservation studio where no damage was discovered.

— Bernama

 

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