The Prague Post - 'Extraordinary' museum of censored art opens in Spain

EUR -
AED 4.251215
AFN 76.439115
ALL 96.780134
AMD 443.298699
ANG 2.07205
AOA 1061.502376
ARS 1561.005504
AUD 1.774746
AWG 2.083647
AZN 1.964364
BAM 1.955794
BBD 2.333103
BDT 141.029586
BGN 1.956064
BHD 0.436402
BIF 3413.575239
BMD 1.157582
BND 1.503863
BOB 8.032976
BRL 6.304199
BSD 1.158402
BTN 102.648142
BWP 15.502021
BYN 3.940905
BYR 22688.599422
BZD 2.329703
CAD 1.623954
CDF 3031.128584
CHF 0.93069
CLF 0.02824
CLP 1107.863578
CNY 8.235904
CNH 8.261608
COP 4546.686658
CRC 582.893254
CUC 1.157582
CUP 30.675912
CVE 110.264676
CZK 24.30862
DJF 205.725477
DKK 7.46838
DOP 72.839157
DZD 150.822387
EGP 55.220233
ERN 17.363724
ETB 169.994233
FJD 2.630954
FKP 0.865181
GBP 0.868042
GEL 3.136757
GGP 0.865181
GHS 13.841959
GIP 0.865181
GMD 83.345775
GNF 10051.927086
GTQ 8.872974
GYD 242.349289
HKD 9.005701
HNL 30.422648
HRK 7.535168
HTG 151.568901
HUF 391.866858
IDR 19157.165225
ILS 3.807636
IMP 0.865181
INR 102.640851
IQD 1517.482438
IRR 48690.777358
ISK 141.595476
JEP 0.865181
JMD 186.157846
JOD 0.820692
JPY 176.237159
KES 149.594452
KGS 101.230094
KHR 4656.966219
KMF 491.972438
KPW 1041.81629
KRW 1650.092031
KWD 0.355285
KYD 0.965289
KZT 622.342798
LAK 25142.03482
LBP 103731.543661
LKR 350.490485
LRD 211.980294
LSL 20.057728
LTL 3.418038
LVL 0.700209
LYD 6.297009
MAD 10.611169
MDL 19.605027
MGA 5191.939913
MKD 61.61961
MMK 2430.628466
MNT 4161.4598
MOP 9.278893
MRU 46.264465
MUR 52.435999
MVR 17.722565
MWK 2008.676753
MXN 21.340236
MYR 4.893071
MZN 73.965255
NAD 20.057468
NGN 1691.272546
NIO 42.629691
NOK 11.674791
NPR 164.235099
NZD 2.018896
OMR 0.445084
PAB 1.158397
PEN 3.979671
PGK 4.865944
PHP 67.320898
PKR 327.961854
PLN 4.25957
PYG 8163.011305
QAR 4.235288
RON 5.08753
RSD 117.134529
RUB 93.938139
RWF 1681.380541
SAR 4.341406
SBD 9.527524
SCR 16.497407
SDG 696.288714
SEK 10.995729
SGD 1.502743
SHP 0.868486
SLE 26.85746
SLL 24273.906883
SOS 661.992339
SRD 44.908328
STD 23959.602038
STN 24.499716
SVC 10.135883
SYP 15050.798651
SZL 20.046028
THB 37.655826
TJS 10.639477
TMT 4.051536
TND 3.40579
TOP 2.711169
TRY 48.376041
TTD 7.862909
TWD 35.530001
TZS 2842.915049
UAH 48.222642
UGX 3972.988342
USD 1.157582
UYU 46.419864
UZS 14063.837237
VES 223.480412
VND 30496.487335
VUV 141.009522
WST 3.219934
XAF 655.949409
XAG 0.022258
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.128422
XCG 2.087676
XDR 0.815791
XOF 655.957908
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.604429
ZAR 20.025768
ZMK 10419.618827
ZMW 26.324036
ZWL 372.740804
  • NGG

    -1.2270

    73.293

    -1.67%

  • RBGPF

    0.4500

    76

    +0.59%

  • BCC

    -0.2000

    72.12

    -0.28%

  • BTI

    -0.7300

    50.81

    -1.44%

  • GSK

    0.1550

    43.695

    +0.35%

  • SCS

    0.1950

    16.485

    +1.18%

  • CMSC

    0.2800

    23.92

    +1.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.1

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    2.7300

    68.17

    +4%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    45.13

    +0.69%

  • JRI

    0.2650

    14.035

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    11.17

    -1.16%

  • BP

    0.2050

    33.695

    +0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.1410

    24.281

    +0.58%

  • BCE

    0.3050

    24.205

    +1.26%

  • AZN

    -0.0200

    84.51

    -0.02%

'Extraordinary' museum of censored art opens in Spain
'Extraordinary' museum of censored art opens in Spain / Photo: LLUIS GENE - AFP

'Extraordinary' museum of censored art opens in Spain

A crucified Ronald McDonald clown, prayer mats adorned with stilettos and sketches by former Guantanamo prisoners take pride of place at a new museum in Spain devoted to previously censored art.

Text size:

The private Museum of Forbidden Art, which opened to the public in Barcelona on Thursday, features 42 works from around the world that have been denounced, attacked or removed from exhibition.

Works by artists such as Spanish master Francisco de Goya, US cultural icon Andy Warhol and Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei are spread over two floors.

The objects are part of a collection of 200 such works belonging to Tatxo Benet, a Catalan businessman.

While they push boundaries and often sparked controversy, Benet said this was not enough to be included in the museum, located in the centre of the Catalan capital, one of the world's most visited cities.

"We don't collect or show scandalous or controversial works in the museum. We show works in the museum that have been censored, assaulted, violated, banned," he told AFP.

"Works that have a history behind them, without that history they wouldn't be here," he added.

- 'Always have a place' -

Many works deal with religion, such as Finnish artist Jani Leinonen's "McJesus" of a Ronald McDonald sculpture crucified to a wooden cross, which was withdrawn from a museum in Israel.

The museum also showcases a photograph of a crucifix submerged in the urine of New York artist Andres Serrano, which was vandalised during an exhibition in France and sparked an uproar when first shown in the United States in 1989.

Another highlight is a work by French-Algerian artist Zoulikha Bouabdellah featuring 30 Muslim prayer mats, each adorned with a pair of sequinned stilettos, which was pulled from an exhibition in France in 2015 following complaints from a Muslim group.

Benet, one of the founders of Spanish multimedia group Mediapro, said he started building his collection in 2018 when he bought an installation called "Political Prisoners in Contemporary Spain".

It consisted of black-and-white photos with pixellated faces of people who had broken the law, among them Catalan separatist leaders who faced legal action over a failed 2017 secession bid.

The work, by Spanish artist Santiago Sierra, was pulled from a Madrid art fair just two hours after Benet bought it. It is now on display at another museum in the Catalan city of Lleida.

The museum also displays paintings and sketches by former prisoners at the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, including one of the Statue of Liberty submerged in water with only the hand holding a torch and top of the crown visible.

The US government ordered that art made by inmates at the detention centre would have to be destroyed when they are released after an exhibition of works in New York in 2017 sparked controversy.

"Any artist who can't show their work because someone prevents them from doing so is an artist who is censored, and therefore will always have a place in this museum," Benet said.

- 'Amazed' -

Benet was speaking a few metres from a self-portrait of late US artist Chuck Close, known for his massive photorealistic portraits.

The National Gallery of Art in Washington gave up dedicating an exhibition to Close's works after several women accused him of sexually harassing them several years earlier when they came to his studio to pose.

Benet said having so many controversial works together caused visitors' "levels of tolerance to widen and the level of scandal of the work to be lowered".

Corinna Dechateaubourg, a 56-year-old German who was visiting from Hamburg on the exhibition's opening day, said she kept looking up more information on the works on her mobile phone.

"I'm amazed, it's extraordinary, it's really interesting," she told AFP.

Montserrat Izquierdo, a 67-year-old Spaniard, said "it is good to be able to see what is forbidden, what you are not allowed to see normally".

U.Ptacek--TPP