Climate activists in Spain glued their hands to Francisco de Goya’s famous paintings in Madrid’s Prado Museum on Saturday.
A video posted on the Twitter account of the Futuro Vegetal campaign group showed a teacher asking visitors not to photograph the scene.
The works concerned – from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries – include the artists “La Maja Vestida” and “La Maja Desnuda”: La Maja dressed and La Maja nude.
On the wall between the two works a temperature was painted: “+1.5 C”
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“Last week the United Nations recognized the impossibility of keeping us below the limit of 1.5 degrees Celsius (set in the 2016 Paris climate agreement). We need a change now,” reads a tweet with a photo of the couple.
The museum said his paintings had not been damaged and the graffiti had been painted.
“We condemn the use of the museum as a place to make a political protest of any kind,” he said.
Police and Futuro Vegetal said two people were arrested.
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Future Vegetal said the pair were removed using a solvent.
This marks the latest in a series of protests by climate activists, which have impacted famous works of art.
Protesters tried to glue themselves to the glass covering Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring” and others threw tomato soup on Van Gogh’s “The Sower” and one of his sunflower paintings.
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Those works were covered.
All of this precedes the GOP27 conference on climate change in Egypt, which will take place starting on Sunday.
Reuters contributed to this report.