Bangkok Post

Mysterious vandal damages do●ens of artworks in Berlin museums

- FELIX HOFFMANN

Vandals have damaged dozens of artworks and artefacts at some of Berlin’s most renowned museums, police said last week, in a stunning attack kept quiet by authoritie­s for more than two weeks.

Egyptian stone sculptures and sarcophagi as well as the frames of valuable 19th-century paintings at three institutio­ns on the German capital’s Unesco-listed Museum Island were among more than 60 objects sprayed with an “oily liquid”, leaving visible stains, Christina Haak, deputy director of Berlin’s state museums, told reporters.

National media, which had earlier referred to around 70 damaged objects, called it “one of the biggest attacks on art and antiquitie­s in German postwar history”.

The state criminal investigat­ion office (LKA) said it has opened an investigat­ion over “property damage to artworks and artefacts on display”.

Police believe t he vandalism occurred on Oct 3, German Unity Day, during opening hours at the Pergamon Museum, Neues Museum and Alte Nationalga­lerie.

A museum staff member reported the damage to her superiors that day, a national holiday, and the LKA was informed two days later.

LKA criminal division chief Carsten Pfohl told a news conference that the case was not made public initially to protect the investigat­ion and out of “considerat­ion” for the owners of works on loan.

He said there had been about 3,000 people visiting the museums that day and initial viewing of security camera footage had not turned up any suspects.

German Culture Minister Monika Gruetters expressed shock at the vandalism.

“Beyond the pure damage to property, such attacks demonstrat­e a deep contempt for artworks and culture achievemen­ts as a whole,” she said, ordering a security review at the museums.

The director of the Egyptian collection, Friederike Seyfried, said the restoratio­n work would be “extensive” and complex because the colourless oily liquid stained many different kinds of materials.

“You can’t just wipe off oil,” she said, calling the attack a “painful experience which we weren’t expecting”.

She said a full inventory of the museums’ collection­s had been taken but that the total damage could only be estimated when the restoratio­n work was complete.

Investigat­ors said they were in the dark about a possible motive.

A joint article by the Die Zeit weekly and public broadcaste­r Deutschlan­dfunk, which first reported the incident late on Tuesday, noted that Attila Hildmann, an activist who has railed against government measures to contain the coronaviru­s, had in August and September spread outlandish conspiracy theories about Museum Island.

Using his Telegram channel, Hildmann claimed the Pergamon Museum, closed for part of the summer due to the pandemic, held t he “throne of Satan”.

He said the institutio­n was the centre of a “global satanist and corona criminal scene” where “they sacrifice humans at night and abuse children”, in an echo of the internatio­nal QAnon conspiracy movement.

Pfohl of the LKA said that the police would “not take part in such speculatio­n” about a possible link to Hildmann and that the investigat­ion was pursuing “all leads”.

Berlin newspaper Tagesspieg­el said that museum visitors who had booked tickets for Oct 3 had been contacted by police to ask for help with the investigat­ion.

A Unesco World Heritage site, Berlin’s Museum Island is home to precious artefacts including a legendary bust of the Egyptian Queen Nefertiti and Babylon’s Ishtar Gate.

It attracts around 3 million visitors each year and is undergoing a major renovation and expansion.

 ??  ?? Reporters look at damage caused by vandals.
Reporters look at damage caused by vandals.
 ??  ?? A close up of the ‘oily liquid’ damage.
A close up of the ‘oily liquid’ damage.

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