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As Just Stop Oil activists focus on culture hotspots around the world, we remember the times when protesters have used art and culture to make their case.
Not a week goes by without a new demonstration by teams of activists on planet-like problems. While supermarkets and retail branches have been attacked recently, organized objections have also affected many cultural regions of the world.
Here are five examples of how protest affected the world.
Credit: Annette Dubois, CC BY-NC 2. 0. Demonstrators took to the water in Venice to protest the effect of cruise ships on the lagoon’s fragile ecosystem.
When Italy began to regain some point of activity after coronavirus restrictions were lifted in May 2021, it marked the return of cruise ships docked in Venice’s historic port.
Anti-cruise ship protesters, No Grandi Navi (No Big Ships), claimed the government had failed to act on a decree banning ships “as tall as apartment buildings” from entering the city center.
When the 92,409-tonne MSC Orchestra emerged from the water, members of the environmental field echoed considerations about the sustainability of the fragile lagoon and the impact those huge ships could have on the UNESCO World Heritage site.
If Grandi Navi, a counter-protest group, made the decision not to fly out of the water. They noted that thousands of other people in the region have lost their jobs, especially since the maritime terminal hired many other people in the cruise shipping industry before the pandemic hit.
Finally, vessels weighing more than 25,000 tons banned in August 2021.
Credit: A. Davey, CC BY-NC-ND 2. 0. La Peruvian people felt Greenpeace crossed the line when it entered sacred ground
Greenpeace was forced to talk to the rest of Peru’s people after a disclosure stunt touched the historic territory of the Nazca Lines, a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Activists broke into the high-security box in December 2014, a site that removed photographs of plants and animals from the ground, and added a giant hummingbird that existed about 1,500 years ago.
They placed giant yellow letters designed to be noticed from above, declaring, “It’s time for a change!The long term is renewable. No one can walk along those respected lines, so the effect would be smooth visual from the air.
The organization said the message was aimed at leaders of the U. N. weather talks in Lima, but admitted their moves appeared to be “negligent and rude. “
The Deputy Minister of Culture, Luis Jaime Castillo, criticized: “This is a real slap in the face to everything sacred about Peruvians. “
The Zentrum für Politische Schönheit (Center for Political Beauty) is a German art movement that believes that “resistance is an art that will have to hurt, aggravate and disturb. “
They followed this mantra in December 2019 after installing a two-and-a-half-meter monument next to the Reichstag in Berlin, claiming it contained the remains of Jews who suffered Nazi persecution in Germany, Poland and Ukraine.
The monument was intended to warn Angela Merkel’s CDU party to disassociate itself from any possible collusion with the far-right AfD group.
There was outrage from many organizations and relatives of the victims, and the Auschwitz International Committee deemed it “disrespectful” towards other people in eternal rest.
Another group, the Performing Arts Committee, attempted to dismantle the metal column with a hammer a few weeks later. Its leader, Eliyah Havemann, said, “No one deserves to make art and politics out of the ashes of Holocaust victims. “
Swimming is prohibited in Bristol’s historic Roman baths, but that didn’t stop members of Extinction Rebellion from jumping into the water dressed in white and dressed in a symbolic white rose in May 2019.
Hamish Evans, a member of the group, said: “This action symbolises the urgency of the ecological crisis while evoking the nearby disorders of water scarcity, pollutants and loss of sovereignty over water. “
Bathers used to shower annually at the site until 1978, when a woman died of suspected meningitis. Protesters were warned that the water was not being treated, but they still continued with their floating demonstration.
Vladimir Putin proudly oversaw the 2018 World Cup final at Moscow’s impressive Luzhniki Stadium in 2018 alongside FIFA and the International Olympic Committee’s top influencers.
However, the relationship between France and Croatia was briefly interrupted by an invasion of tone through the feminist and functional art organization Pussy Riot.
The activists rose to fame in 2012 when they directed their punk rock music to the Russian Orthodox Church’s flagship symbol, the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour.
This time, 3 members of the troop entered the field. One member, Nika Nikulshina, even gave French superstar striker Kylian Mbappe a top five.
Pussy Riot called on Russia to release all political prisoners, end “illegal” arrests at public gatherings, allow “political competition” and avoid “fabricating criminal cases. “
The protesters were sentenced to 15 days in prison and banned from attending sporting events for 3 years. Who knows if they planned to disrupt the 2022 Champions League final in St. Petersburg?It was transferred to Paris via UEFA after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Banner Symbol Credit: Stop the Oil
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