Wednesday 1 June 2016

Art disasters: Boy reduces £10,000 Lego statue to rubble


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  • From the sectionWorld
A giant figure of a fox called Nick from the film Zootopia was smashed to pieces by a four-year-old Chinese boy only hours after going on display.
The statue is said to have cost more than 100,000 yuan (£10,382) and taken creator Mr Zhao three days and nights to build.
He posted before and after photos of Nick on the Sina Weibo social network.
A "no touching" sign in place at the Chinese Lego expo seems to have been of little help.
Photo of statue of Nick from the film Zootopia made out of LEGO.Image copyrightWEIBO.COM/TRUSH
Photo of broken statue of Nick from the film Zootopia at the LEGO expo in China.Image copyrightWEIBO.COM/TRUSH
Series of photos from Mr Zhao's Weibo account showing the building of Nick the fox from Zootopia until it got smashed. The last photo is on an animated man smiling while shedding tears.Image copyrightWEIBO.COM/TRUSH
Following the incident, the hashtag #ManSpends3DaysAndNightsBuildingBlocks has been used over 13,000 times on Chinese social media.

'The child did not intend to break it'

According to some reports, the parents of the boy apologised and offered to pay for the damage. Mr Zhao said he would not be accepting any compensation as the young boy had not done it on purpose. "The child did not intend to break it," he insisted.
Clearly there are risks involved with art installations and paintings that are within touching distance of little (and big) hands.
Last month CCTV caught two young boys who were seen touching and pulling the delicate angel wings of a piece in the Shanghai Museum of Glass in China. The two adults accompanying them were seen filming the boys on their phones then walking away after the wings were smashed.
The artist, Shelly Xue, called her work Angel in Waiting. It took 27 months to build as a dedication to her newborn daughter.
Shelly decided not to fix the damaged piece and instead renamed it Broken.
Black and white photo of angel wings renamed 'Broken' after the wings got smashed by visitors to the Shanghai Museum of Glass.Image copyrightINSTAGRAM ET_GLORIA
In 2015, a boy visiting a museum in Ipswich accidently smashed an 18th Century jug.
The Delftware puzzle was broken into about 65 pieces. Each of the pieces of the jug was then logged and photographed. The jug was eventually repaired and moved to Ipswich Art Museum in the High Street.
Broken vase and piecesImage copyrightIPSWICH BOROUGH COUNCIL
Image captionEach of the 65 pieces of the jug was logged and photographed as part of the repair project
Restored to its former glory: the jug after the repairImage copyrightIPSWICH BROOUGH COUNCIL
Image captionA puzzle jug has three spouts - so users have to guess from which water will pour
It is not just children who are to blame for the accidental destruction of museum pieces.
In 2006, an adult visitor tripped over his shoelace and destroyed three 300-year-old Chinese Qing Dynasty vases in Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge in the UK.
Casino Tycoon and art collector Steve Wynn accidently elbowed a painting by Pablo Picasso while trying to sell it in 2006. However, after restoration he was able to sell the painting for $16 million more than it's pre-accident price.
In 2015, cleaners at the Museion museum in Bolzano, Italy decided to clean up what they mistook for the aftermath of a good time had by museum staff.
The installation called, "Where shall we go dancing tonight?" consisted of empty bottles, confetti, cigarette butts and paper streamers. Cleaners threw objects into bin bags assuming the mess was left over from an actual party.
Photo of art exhibition from Museion museum in Bolzano, Italy showing empty bottles, a mirrorball and party streamers.Image copyrightFACEBOOK.COM/MUSEION.BOZEN
In 2012, an elderly parishioner stunned Spanish cultural officials with an alarming and unauthorised attempt to restore a prized Jesus Christ fresco.
Ecce Homo (Behold the Man) by Elias Garcia Martinez had held pride of place in the Sanctuary of Mercy Church near Zaragoza for more than 100 years.
Cecilia Gimenez took her brush to it after years of deterioration due to moisture - but her "restoration" rather failed to impress.
Elias Garcia Martinez's Ecce Homo (left) and the Image copyrightCENTRO DE ESTUDIOS BORJANOS
Image captionElias Garcia Martinez's Ecce Homo (left) and the "restoration"

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