ST. PETERSBURG/MOSCOW, September 5 (RIA Novosti) – Two art museums in St. Petersburg, which were closed after police seized a number of controversial works of art satirizing leading Russian politicians, have reopened for business.
Alexander Donskoi, curator of both museums, told RIA Novosti that Tochka-G (G-Spot) – an erotic art museum – and Muzei Vlasti (Museum of Authority) have once again opened their doors.
Police first raided Muzei Vlasti at the end of August and confiscated four pictures.
They included a rainbow-colored portrait of St. Petersburg lawmaker Vitaly Milonov – who authored legislation banning promotion of homosexuality to minors – and a painting of President Vladimir Putin in a nightgown, touching the hair of Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, clad in a pushup bra and panties.
The painter of the portraits, Konstantin Altunin, told RIA Novosti after the raid that he was fleeing Russia and applying for asylum in Paris for fear of incurring the further wrath of the Russian authorities. The museum is now showing a different exhibition, its curator Donskoi said.
Tochka-G was raided a few days later. Police took “Wrestling,” a portrait featuring Putin and US President Barack Obama dueling with oversized, multi-colored penises.
The paintings were confiscated to determine their compliance with the law, Donskoi said.
An administrator at Tochka-G said that trouble with the authorities over the painting had been avoided last year by persuading them that the portrait was more complimentary to Putin than to Obama, The Moscow Times reported.
Obama is shown with only one penis in “Wrestling,” while the Russian president has two.
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