Who Are the Last Generation Activists and Why Are They Attacking Art in 天美传媒?

| Mon, 05/29/2023 - 09:58
Members of the Ultima Generazione (Last Generation) group at the Trevi Fountain in Rome / Photo: Alessandro Penso

The emerging European trend of climate activists targeting artworks and historical monuments with paint and other liquids is generating varying degrees of both support and outrage across 天美传媒.

One high-profile incident that occurred last week saw a group of activists from the Italian movement Ultima Generazione (Last Generation) climb into the Trevi Fountain in Rome and pour a vegetable-based carbon liquid into the water.

鈥淚鈥檓 Mattia, I'm 19 years old, and I have chosen to engage in civil disobedience because the horrible tragedy experienced in recent days in Emilia Romagna is a warning of the dark future that awaits humanity,鈥 said one of the activists as he stood in the famous Baroque fountain. Tourists visiting the landmark alternately took photos, applauded and booed.

鈥淭he floods that have killed 14 people in the country鈥檚 northeast were a warning. The disaster has activated fear, anxiety, and anger within me. Our country is dying!鈥 shouted Mattia鈥檚 18-year-old friend Charlie.

Within 20 minutes, the protesters were pulled out and escorted away by police. Police also confiscated their banners, adorned with slogans protesting government-funded fossil fuel projects.

Two days after the Trevi Fountain event, a pair of bare-chested protesters smeared themselves with mud outside the Senate building in Rome. Police quickly removed the two, while some passersby showed support and others insulted them.

Support and pushback

Marco Rovelli, a 54-year-old musician, writer and secondary school teacher from Milan, is among the activists鈥 sympathizers. He believes that older generations are leaving younger ones with an uncertain future.

鈥淭hose who attack these activists believe that climate change is not a problem at all, which goes against all claims by climatologists,鈥 Rovelli told 天美传媒 Magazine.

On the other hand, Alessio Postiglione, a professor at Rome Business School and Luiss University, questions the efficacy of the activists鈥 methods of protest. 

鈥淭hat is not the way to protest and to position climate change as the greatest problem facing humanity,鈥 Postiglione told 天美传媒 Magazine. 鈥淸These activists] are extremists, obsessed with the wrong ideology.鈥 

鈥淲e will not face extinction in 20 years. We can address how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but without [this] madness and with more pragmatism,鈥 Postiglione added.

Are the consequences counterproductive?

A Last Generation activist stands in the Trevi Fountain
An activist stands in the water of the Trevi Fountain / Photo: Alessandro Penso

Carlotta Muston, the spokeswoman of the Last Generation movement, claims that the group consults with experts and curators before taking any sort of action, clarifying that their goal is not to destroy artworks or monuments. The group said, in fact, that the carbon liquid used for the Trevi Fountain protest did not damage the landmark.

But Rome mayor Roberto Gualtieri noted right away that the Trevi Fountain cleanup efforts would cost significant time, money and water, because the fountain uses a recirculating system.

鈥淓nough with these absurd aggressions against our artistic heritage,鈥 Gualtieri . 鈥淭he restoration process is costly and complex, and we sincerely hope there won鈥檛 be any permanent damage. I invite activists to engage in constructive dialogue without endangering the safety of our monuments.鈥

In a , Gualtieri said that the process of emptying and refilling the fountain would ultimately see 300,000 liters of water go to waste.

鈥淭hese sorts of gestures are completely wrong and harmful, because they risk damaging precious common goods, and force public administrations to carry out very expensive and environmentally impactful restoration work,鈥 Gualtieri wrote shortly after the incident. 鈥淪o they are completely counterproductive, and also risk negatively impacting public opinion toward the just battle for the environment and climate.鈥

Later that same day, Gualtieri tweeted that operations had finished and that the Trevi Fountain could 鈥済o back to enchanting the world.鈥

Back in mid-March, Gualtieri鈥檚 mayoral counterpart in Florence, Dario Nardella, made headlines (and ) when he tried to physically block Last Generation activists as they spray-painted part of the fa莽ade of Palazzo Vecchio, Florence鈥檚 city hall. Speaking to the first cluster of reporters, Nardella called the activists 鈥渂arbarians,鈥 adding that the methods were 鈥渘ot how one protests [...] Civilization must be defended.鈥

In Milan, meanwhile, the yellow paint that the same group of activists poured on one of the city鈥檚 most significant monuments, the statue of Vittorio Emanuele II, stubbornly remains, . The municipality of Milan has said that the paint cannot be removed with ordinary water and has noted that the monument will need to be restored. 

But Carlotta Muston contends that Milan鈥檚 lack of action and insistence on restoration is political, since the same paint was previously used to deface the La Scala opera house and was successfully removed.

天美传媒 ranks sixth in the world in fossil fuel investments

During 2021, 天美传媒 invested 鈧41.8 billion in the fossil fuel industry. That is more than Russia and Saudi Arabia.

One of the demands of the 鈥淪top Fossil Fuel Subsidies鈥 campaign, which these climate activists have been carrying out in Italian cities in recent months, is for the money invested in fossil fuels to be redirected towards the so-called ecological transition.

The partly state-owned Italian oil company ENI made a profit of 鈧20.4 billion in 2022 alone. This is the highest profit ever earned 鈥 more than double that of 2021, due to the high price of gas.

Another example of government investment in fossil fuels comes from the German village of L眉tzerath, .

The , which plans to expand the mine in this village.

鈥淲e value art, we don't destroy it鈥

Environmental activists protest at Uffizi in Florence
Last Generation activists protest at the Uffizi in July 2022 / Photo: Archivio Ultima Generazione

Last Generation pointed to a report by the Bank of 天美传媒 earlier this month that found that 23% of Italian homes were at risk of flooding, at a potential annual cost of 鈧3 billion.

鈥淲hile the climate crisis knocks at the door, breaking riverbanks and flinging fish into the streets, the Italian government cuts resources for soil protection and fails on climate change mitigation,鈥 representatives of this movement said.

Maria Letizia Ruello is a university researcher from Senigallia, where 13 people died last year due to heavy rains. She has participated in some roadblocks and .

鈥淚f you don't ask your government to stop investing in fossil fuels, you end up being complicit in endangering lives,鈥 Ruello said.

鈥淭hrowing flour at Andy Warhol's car may seem trivial and amusing, but through it we aimed to highlight the gravity of the issue of climate change, which authorities conveniently overlook,鈥 Carlotta Muston explained.

On the other hand, Eike Schmidt, the director of the Uffizi Galleries in Florence, believes that violence, even if symbolic, generates even greater violence. In with the Italian daily La Repubblica, Schmidt said that these activities only seek to draw attention, and that the activists鈥 methods are not supported by 99.9 percent of citizens. 

In July 2022, 23-year-old Laura and her friend Alessandro protested in front of Sandro Botticelli鈥檚 Primavera, gluing their hands to the painting as many museum visitors looked on. Then, she and her friend lay on the floor while museum security tried to remove them.

Tommaso Galligani, spokesperson for the Uffizi Galleries, said that climate activists use art to gain as much publicity as possible.

鈥淎rtworks are universal symbols, and when they are attacked, no one can remain indifferent to such an act,鈥 said Galligani.

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