Skip to content
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Image by the Russian Presidential Press and Information Office, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Russian police seize painting of Putin wearing lingerie

Russian President Vladimir Putin. Image by the Russian Presidential Press and Information Office, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Image by the Russian Presidential Press and Information Office, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AFP) – Russian police said Wednesday they had raided an exhibition and confiscated a painting that portrayed President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev lounging together in women’s lingerie.

Police said they confiscated four paintings by artist Konstantin Altunin and closed down the exhibition of his work in Russia’s second city of Saint Petersburg, which is set to host world leaders for the G20 summit next month.

One of the paintings confiscated shows Putin playing with Medvedev’s hair.

He is wearing a strappy nightie, while Medvedev has cleavage bursting out of a bra and is wearing skimpy knickers.

“We received information from a citizen that the images in the museum broke the law. Police confiscated four paintings and currently experts are examining them,” said police spokesman Vyacheslav Stepchenko.

The exhibition made explicit references to a controversial law recently passed by Putin banning promotion of homosexuality among minors, although police did not specify the legal grounds for its closure.

The law, which critics says can be used to shut down any gay rights event, has prompted a chorus of international protest, and British actor Stephen Fry this month called for Russia to be deprived of the right to host the Winter Olympics in Sochi next year.

Police carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles arrived at the small privately owned Museum of Power, which opened this summer, its owner Alexander Donskoi told AFP.

Police accused its creators of extremism, a criminal offence that carries more serious charges than the anti-gay law, Donskoi said.

“We are accused of extremism. Police recommended us not to make a noise about this incident ahead of the G20, but it is scandalous, art has nothing to do with politics,” Donskoi said.

The artist Altunin left Russia in fear of being arrested after the show’s closure, Donskoi said.

“After hearing that police were waiting at his home, Konstantin bought a ticket for Denmark and as of Wednesday he is in France,” Donskoi said.

One of the other paintings that was confiscated showed one of the anti-gay law’s most outspoken backers, St. Petersburg lawmaker Vitaly Milonov, in front of the rainbow flag of the international Gay Pride movement.

Milonov accompanied the police who raided the exhibition on the city’s central shopping street Nevsky Prospekt, Donskoi said.

“After visiting the exhibition a few days ago, Milonov came yesterday evening with the police. He is behind the ban on the exhibition,” he said.

Milonov on Petersburg Echo radio dismissed the works of art as “tasteless, at the same level as a “yob” from a vocational college who scribbles in a toilet at a bus stop.”

But the curator for contemporary art at the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg said Milonov was overstepping his powers in comments to AFP.

“Lawmaker Milonov has the right to criticize the exhibition as a visitor, but he should not express himself as if he was a prosecutor,” Alexander Borovsky said. The exhibition, which was titled “Leaders,” also included images of Soviet leaders Stalin and Lenin, as well as a painting showing Putin with a halo.

Donskoi has also opened private museums of erotic art in Moscow and St.

Petersburg.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Russian President Vladimir Putin. Image by the Russian Presidential Press and Information Office, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Image by the Russian Presidential Press and Information Office, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.