Mona Lisa painting targeted by protesters who throw pumpkin soup at da Vinci painting in Paris

Two people have been arrested by French police

Maira Butt
Sunday 28 January 2024 11:00 EST
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Moment protesters throw soup at Mona Lisa in Paris

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Two people have been arrested after protesters hurled pumpkin soup at the Mona Lisa painting in Paris.

Visitors at the Louvre gallery watched in shock as a woman threw liquid from a tin onto the Leonardo da Vinci painting, one of the word’s most famous artworks.

Paris police said they had arrested two people in connection with the action, according to the AP news agency.

In footage of the incident, the pair are demanding the right to “healthy and sustainable food” saying “our agricultural system is sick”.

A tin of pumpkin soup was hurled over the painting which is encased in bulletproof glass
A tin of pumpkin soup was hurled over the painting which is encased in bulletproof glass (AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images)

They shout: “What’s the most important thing? Art, or right to healthy and sustainable food?

“Our farming system is sick. Our farmers are dying at work.”

The pair then cross a boundary between the painting and public and stand beside the artwork, their right hands held up in a salute. Staff rush in to cover up the mess, propping up black protective panels.

Both protesters wore a T-shirt saying Riposte Alimentaire, which translates as ”food counterattack” and is the name of the activist group who have taken responsibility for the stunt.

The protesters demanded “healthy and sustainable food"
The protesters demanded “healthy and sustainable food" (AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images)

They describe themselves as a collective which seeks to highlight the need to protect sustainable food.

A statement sent to the AFP news agency says the action marks the “start of a campaign of civil resistance with the clear demand... of the social security of sustainable food”.

The Louvre said that members of the group sprayed pumpkin soup on the painting at around 10:00am local time (09:00 GMT), and that there was no damage.

It said the Salle des Etats, where the work is displayed, was evacuated at the time and reopened to visitors shortly after at 11:30am local time (10:30 GMT).

They added: “The museum will lodge a complaint.”

The image, which is more than 500 years old, sits behind protected glass since the 1950s to protect it after an acid attack. It was upgraded to armoured glass in 2005.

French Minister of Culture Rachida Dati sent her support to staff at the Louvre and said that “no cause can justify it being targeted”.

In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, she said: “The Mona Lisa like our heritage belongs to future generations.”

After the incident, management at the Louvre opened a crisis unit, closing the room holding the Mona Lisa for cleaning.

The action comes after days of protests by farmers over rising fuel costs and changing regulations. Cabbages, tomatoes and other food was seen strewn across the highway as their protest entered its second week.

In 2022, a cake was thrown at the image in a demonstration against climate change. A man disguised as an elderly woman in a wheelchair threw cake at the famous painting.

The perpetrator, wearing a wig and lipstick, called on people to “think of the Earth” as they were led from the scene.

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