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BARBARIC ACT!
Greek Politician Destroys Art in National Gallery,
Claiming ‘Blasphemy’!
April 2025
Greece’s National Gallery was forced to close on Monday last week after a
religious fundamentalist, right-wing politician vandalized artworks he deemed to
be blasphemous in an exhibition of contemporary Greek art. With the aid of an
accomplice, the elected official allegedly targeted four paintings, which he forcibly
removed from the wall and threw to the ground, shattering their protective glass
of at least two works.
The Athens museum confirmed that the attack took place at around 11:35 a.m.
local time on March 10. The damaged artworks, all by the same artist, Christoforos
Katsadiotis, included three pieces from his “Icon” series and Saint Christopher
(2020). The works are caricatures of religious icons.
Nikolaos Papadopoulos is a member of parliament in Greece, representing the
far-right and ultra-conservative party Niki, which translates to “Victory.” After the
attack on Monday, he was initially detained at the museum and then by local
police before being released. According to reports in the Greek media, the
authorities have confirmed that he will face charges of aggravated vandalism.
Papadopoulos has threatened to “take all legal actions” against the museum,
which he alleges detained him illegally since the Greek constitution “provides that
a Member of Parliament may not be prosecuted, imprisoned, or otherwise
restricted without the permission of Parliament.”
The MP had previously criticized the targeted works as offensive to Orthodox
Christianity in parliament, while addressing Greece’s culture minister Lina
Mendoni. Her ministry has stated on this issue that it “never engages in acts of
censorship.”
In a statement, the museum’s board of directors said “we unequivocally condemn
any act of vandalism, violence, and censorship that violates the constitutionally
guaranteed freedom of artistic expression.”
Katsadiotis, a Paris-based artist, has also spoken out in defense of his work to
local media, stating that it was a “poetic” expression that was not intended to
offend. He argued that any artist “has the right to express his or her personal
point of view, to react and, in so doing, ask the questions they want to ask, such
as, about war waged on the pretext of purity and justice under any given god.”
Katsadiotis explained that he is intrigued by the ambiguity and implicitly menacing
nature of religion, represented by saints “who threaten that, if we’re not on their
side, we will face all manner of trials and tribulations.” He added that religion “is
the most kitsch element of our folk history—full of miracles, tragedies and curses,
it is our modern mythology.”
After the attack, Papadopoulos defended his actions in a lengthy post on X titled
“Government of Atheists and Antichrists.” The Greek politician revealed that he
had written a letter to the museum’s director, Syrago Tsiara, asking that
Katasadiotis’s works be removed. He claimed that his original intent on visiting the
museum was to speak to her in person but, when she was not available, he
instead visited the exhibition and attacked the works.
“I feel moved that the vast majority of society embraces the defense of the Sacred
and Holy of the Fatherland, sharing my indignation,” he said.
The temporary exhibition, titled “The Allure of the Bizarre,” features the work of 10
Greek artists and closes September 30, 2025. It runs alongside a parallel
exhibition of Goya’s Los Caprichos from 1799, it spotlights contemporary
interpretations of the fantastical or grotesque that the Spanish Old Master also
explored, as well as experiences of marginalization or existential anxiety.
Greek Tribune
Adelaide, South Australia