Controversial sculpture of Spain's ex- king on display
AFP
BARCELONA, SPAIN- A controversial sculpture of former king Juan Carlos of Spain being sodomised has finally gone on display in Barcelona.
The decision to show the "very sensitive" papier mache sculpture by Austrian artist Ines Doujak comes after the director of Barcelona's Museum of Contemporary Art reversed an earlier ruling.
"The opinions of many and various sectors of society, from the world of art and culture to politics and the media as well as international professionals from the world of art convinced me to go back on my first decision not to inaugurate," Bartomeu Mari said in an open letter.
The sculpture shows the former king, who abdicated in June 2014, being sodomised by the late Bolivian union leader Domitila Barrios, who is in turn being sodomised by a dog.
The work entitled "Not Dressed for Conquering/Haute Couture 04 Transport" was exhibited in December 2014 at the Sao Paulo Biennial.
The artist said at the time that the work aimed to "play with power relations and subvert them".
Mari had originally asked curators to withdraw the piece from the Beast and the Sovereign exhibition of 30 works by international artists, according to Spanish media.
They refused and instead pushed him to either show it or cancel the whole exhibition.
Mari has offered his "sincere apologies" as well as his resignation to the museum over the decision.
"I never saw what I did as censorship," he said in his letter.
"I saw it as a disagreement over the presence of a work and the consequences of its possible readings," he added.
The exhibition opened to the public on Saturday.
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The sculpture shows the former king, who abdicated in June 2014, being sodomised by the late Bolivian union leader Domitila Barrios, who is in turn being sodomised by a dog.
The work entitled "Not Dressed for Conquering/Haute Couture 04 Transport" was exhibited in December 2014 at the Sao Paulo Biennial.
The artist said at the time that the work aimed to "play with power relations and subvert them".
Mari had originally asked curators to withdraw the piece from the Beast and the Sovereign exhibition of 30 works by international artists, according to Spanish media.
They refused and instead pushed him to either show it or cancel the whole exhibition.
Mari has offered his "sincere apologies" as well as his resignation to the museum over the decision.
"I never saw what I did as censorship," he said in his letter.
"I saw it as a disagreement over the presence of a work and the consequences of its possible readings," he added.
The exhibition opened to the public on Saturday.
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