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Czechs apologise for hoax EU art | Czechs apologise for hoax EU art |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The Czech EU presidency has apologised for an art installation it commissioned that lampoons national stereotypes. | The Czech EU presidency has apologised for an art installation it commissioned that lampoons national stereotypes. |
Czech Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra apologised directly to Bulgaria, which has formally complained over its depiction as a toilet in the art work. | Czech Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra apologised directly to Bulgaria, which has formally complained over its depiction as a toilet in the art work. |
He said the image, at the European Council building in Brussels, would be removed if Sofia insisted. | He said the image, at the European Council building in Brussels, would be removed if Sofia insisted. |
David Cerny, the Czech artist behind the work, admits misleading officials over his intentions with the project. | David Cerny, the Czech artist behind the work, admits misleading officials over his intentions with the project. |
He said he had "wanted to find out if Europe is able to laugh at itself". | He said he had "wanted to find out if Europe is able to laugh at itself". |
The Czech Republic thought it had commissioned work from 27 European artists for the Entropa display, which was installed at the weekend to mark the start of its six-month presidency. | The Czech Republic thought it had commissioned work from 27 European artists for the Entropa display, which was installed at the weekend to mark the start of its six-month presidency. |
But it turned out the work - an eight-tonne mosaic resembling a snap-out plastic modelling kit - was entirely completed by Mr Cerny and two associates. | |
'No censorship' | |
At the official unveiling of Entropa on Thursday, the artwork "came to life", emitting noises and flashing lights, to general applause - a sound not often heard in the EU Council building in Brussels, says the BBC's Oana Lungescu in Brussels. | |
Czech Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra apologised to anyone who was offended by the work. | |
I apologise to Bulgaria and its government if it feels offended Czech Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra In pictures: Entropa installationMardell blog: But is it art? | |
"I apologise to Bulgaria and its government if it feels offended, and I think we are certainly ready to engage in a dialogue," he said, quoted by the AFP news agency. | "I apologise to Bulgaria and its government if it feels offended, and I think we are certainly ready to engage in a dialogue," he said, quoted by the AFP news agency. |
Sofia summoned the Czech ambassador on Wednesday to complain. | Sofia summoned the Czech ambassador on Wednesday to complain. |
"If you stand by your request to remove it," he told a Bulgarian diplomat at the ceremony, "of course we will certainly do that". | "If you stand by your request to remove it," he told a Bulgarian diplomat at the ceremony, "of course we will certainly do that". |
But he said the rest of the installation would stay. | |
"We wanted to prove that 20 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, there is no censorship," said the former Czech dissident. | |
But he refused to share the platform with the artist, who insisted his piece was in the European tradition of satire, like Monty Python and France's Les Guignols. | |
He also denied that the Lego entry for Denmark was a representation of one of the controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that appeared in 2005. | |
As well as portraying Bulgaria as a toilet, Entropa depicts Romania as a Dracula theme-park and France as a country on strike. | As well as portraying Bulgaria as a toilet, Entropa depicts Romania as a Dracula theme-park and France as a country on strike. |
The Netherlands is shown as a series of minarets submerged by a flood - a possible reference to the nation's simmering religious tensions. | The Netherlands is shown as a series of minarets submerged by a flood - a possible reference to the nation's simmering religious tensions. |
Germany is shown as a network of motorways vaguely resembling a swastika, while the UK - criticised by some for being one of the EU's most Eurosceptic members - is absent from Europe altogether. | Germany is shown as a network of motorways vaguely resembling a swastika, while the UK - criticised by some for being one of the EU's most Eurosceptic members - is absent from Europe altogether. |