"Several sculptures are completely smashed," she told AFP, adding that police had come and led away the activists. The works were made of plaster and linoleum.
A police spokesman told AFP that he could "confirm the incident happened and that currently all the participants of the conflict have been taken to the station to write statements."
A well-known Orthodox activist Dmitry Tsorionov, known by the nickname Dmitry Enteo, earlier said he was at the Manege exhibition centre.
"We called the police," he said. "They will close the exhibition for offending believers."
Enteo, quoted by Interfax news agency, had said the exhibition included an "indecent" depiction of Jesus Christ and was "dirty, harsh mockery of Jesus Christ and the saints."
The head of the nationalist God's Will group is a prominent conservative activist. He cites Orthodox values while picketing and heckling at arts events and protests, sometimes with a television camera crew in tow. This year he attempted to stop a gay pride rally in Moscow.
The exhibition called "Sculptures that We Don't See," showed works by Soviet sculptors that did not see the light of day during the Soviet period because they were non-conformist.
The show, which opened to the public Friday, included some works with religious themes including a crucifixion bas-relief.
Sidur was an avant-garde artist unable to show his non-conformist works publicly in the Soviet era. He died in 1986. A museum in Moscow is now dedicated to his work and his art has been sold at international auction houses such as Sotheby's.
Friday's attack on his works swiftly prompted condemnation.
"Now Orthodox warriors are smashing a sculpture exhibition in the centre of Moscow. Hail the Russian IS," Vladimir Varfomoleyev, a journalist at popular Echo of Moscow radio station, wrote in a Tweet.
- 'Warning, religion!' -
Artist Alexei Knedlyakovsky, whose installation about the Russian protest movement was damaged by Enteo last year, wrote in a Tweet: "Maybe after this Enteo will finally get jailed?"
An Orthodox Church spokesman, Vladimir Legoida told RIA Novosti news agency there must be a "legal assessment" of the attack, while stressing that believers "undoubtedly have the right to protest."
In recent years, religious fundamentalist activists have targeted a number of exhibitions in Moscow and forced them to shut down, while organisers have been fined for inciting hatred.
In 2007, activists attacked an exhibition at Moscow's Sakharov Centre called "Warning, Religion!," complaining it insulted believers.
The exhibition included a print of Jesus with the head of Mickey Mouse and a spoof ad for Coca-Cola with the slogan "This is my Blood."
Russia in 2010 convicted the organisers of inciting religious hatred and fined them.
The Sakharov Centre's director was earlier fined in 2005 for inciting religious hatred with another exhibition called "Warning, Religion!"
Activists had poured red paint on the walls and paintings and smashed windows at the 2003 exhibition.
Such attacks on exhibitions carry echoes of brutal Soviet-era treatment of contemporary artists seen at the time as being ideologically unsound.
The Manege exhibition centre was the scene of one of the most famous Soviet-era crackdowns on contemporary art.
In 1962, then-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev visited an exhibition of abstract painting at the gallery and angrily denounced the artists as "fags" and "bastards."
In 1974, the authorities sent in a bulldozer to destroy an improvised exhibition in a park in southwestern Moscow by avant-garde artists.
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A police spokesman told AFP that he could "confirm the incident happened and that currently all the participants of the conflict have been taken to the station to write statements."
A well-known Orthodox activist Dmitry Tsorionov, known by the nickname Dmitry Enteo, earlier said he was at the Manege exhibition centre.
"We called the police," he said. "They will close the exhibition for offending believers."
Enteo, quoted by Interfax news agency, had said the exhibition included an "indecent" depiction of Jesus Christ and was "dirty, harsh mockery of Jesus Christ and the saints."
The head of the nationalist God's Will group is a prominent conservative activist. He cites Orthodox values while picketing and heckling at arts events and protests, sometimes with a television camera crew in tow. This year he attempted to stop a gay pride rally in Moscow.
The exhibition called "Sculptures that We Don't See," showed works by Soviet sculptors that did not see the light of day during the Soviet period because they were non-conformist.
The show, which opened to the public Friday, included some works with religious themes including a crucifixion bas-relief.
Sidur was an avant-garde artist unable to show his non-conformist works publicly in the Soviet era. He died in 1986. A museum in Moscow is now dedicated to his work and his art has been sold at international auction houses such as Sotheby's.
Friday's attack on his works swiftly prompted condemnation.
"Now Orthodox warriors are smashing a sculpture exhibition in the centre of Moscow. Hail the Russian IS," Vladimir Varfomoleyev, a journalist at popular Echo of Moscow radio station, wrote in a Tweet.
- 'Warning, religion!' -
Artist Alexei Knedlyakovsky, whose installation about the Russian protest movement was damaged by Enteo last year, wrote in a Tweet: "Maybe after this Enteo will finally get jailed?"
An Orthodox Church spokesman, Vladimir Legoida told RIA Novosti news agency there must be a "legal assessment" of the attack, while stressing that believers "undoubtedly have the right to protest."
In recent years, religious fundamentalist activists have targeted a number of exhibitions in Moscow and forced them to shut down, while organisers have been fined for inciting hatred.
In 2007, activists attacked an exhibition at Moscow's Sakharov Centre called "Warning, Religion!," complaining it insulted believers.
The exhibition included a print of Jesus with the head of Mickey Mouse and a spoof ad for Coca-Cola with the slogan "This is my Blood."
Russia in 2010 convicted the organisers of inciting religious hatred and fined them.
The Sakharov Centre's director was earlier fined in 2005 for inciting religious hatred with another exhibition called "Warning, Religion!"
Activists had poured red paint on the walls and paintings and smashed windows at the 2003 exhibition.
Such attacks on exhibitions carry echoes of brutal Soviet-era treatment of contemporary artists seen at the time as being ideologically unsound.
The Manege exhibition centre was the scene of one of the most famous Soviet-era crackdowns on contemporary art.
In 1962, then-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev visited an exhibition of abstract painting at the gallery and angrily denounced the artists as "fags" and "bastards."
In 1974, the authorities sent in a bulldozer to destroy an improvised exhibition in a park in southwestern Moscow by avant-garde artists.
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