One among René Magritte’s most well-known works, The Citadel of the Pyrenees (1959) housed on the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, has been broken by a toddler who pierced the Surrealist canvas with a pinecone.
In keeping with the Occasions of Israel, the younger boy, who visited the museum a number of weeks in the past together with his household, discovered the cone within the museum backyard. He subsequently approached the Magritte canvas, puncturing the piece. The museum was contacted for remark about how lengthy the work shall be off show.
“We’re skilled in conserving work and objects that arrive in poor situation, together with works which have been saved because the Holocaust interval,” Sharon Tager, the museum’s head of conservation, instructed the publication Haaretz. The conservation course of on the Magritte portray will contain treating the layers of paint and mending the canvas, stated Tager.
The Magritte portray, depicting an infinite boulder topped with a fort floating above a uneven sea, has a vibrant historical past. Within the Nineteen Fifties, the lawyer Harry Torczyne had a window dealing with an unpleasant constructing in his New York workplace and determined the easiest way to masks the offensive view can be to ask one among his shoppers to color one thing to cowl it. The shopper was Magritte and the portray that emerged from this odd request was The Citadel of the Pyrenees.
It appears invigilators and museum guards could must maintain a more in-depth eye on younger guests. Early final 12 months a portray by Mark Rothko, housed on the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, was broken by a toddler who made “small scratches” on the work. The incident occurred whereas Gray, Orange on Maroon, No. 8 (1960) was on show within the Depot, a publicly accessible storage facility situated beside the primary museum.









