
Two activists affiliated with the Spanish climate emergency group Futuro Vegetal were arrested at the Museo Naval in Madrid last Sunday, October 12, after throwing biodegradable red paint over a historic painting depicting Christopher Columbus. The group scheduled its action on Spainās National Day, also known as DĆa de la Hispanidad, which commemorates the date on which Columbus arrived on the island of Guanahani in 1492.
To Futuro Vegetal, whose mission is to remediate environmental harm and water diversion by ending reliance on livestock farming, October 12 signifies ācenturies of oppression, exploitation, and genocide against the indigenous population of Abya Yala,ā the group said in a statement on Instagram, using an Indigenous Guna term for parts of the Americas. Futuro Vegetal decried any celebration of Columbusās legacy, calling for an end to the āglorification of colonization and genocides, both historical and current.ā
Museo Naval did not immediately respond to Hyperallergicās inquiries. Museum sources informed the Spanish news outlet El Mundo that the red paint had seeped through the cracks in the artworkās varnished surface and into the weave of the canvas and damaged the paintingās gilt frame.
The workās restoration is ongoing, and the museum is reportedly collaborating with specialists from the nearby Museo del Prado.
The demonstrators ā both women ā splattered paint across the left side of JosĆ© Garneloās āPrimeros homenajes del Nuevo Mundo a Colónā (1892) at the Museo Naval around 2pm. They were dragged away from the artwork by museum security and informally detained ahead of the National Policeās arrival, questioning, and subsequent arrest.
Museum visitors can be heard criticizing the activists in video footage of the action, telling them to āshut upā and accusing them of being āin a cult.ā
A spokesperson for Futuro Vegetal told Hyperallergic via WhatsApp that both activists remain in police custody. Spainās National Police did not immediately respond to Hyperallergicās request for confirmation.
Futuro Vegetalās most recent action aligns with dozens of similar climate emergency interventions at arts and culture institutions worldwide. Courts are cracking the whip on this trending form of activism, with judges doling out months- and years-long prison sentences to demonstrators in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany. Exasperated with climate activists, Italy has moved to impose five-figure fines on anyone who vandalizes cultural heritage across the nation.
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