A crude performance: Semi-naked climate activists protest BP art sponsorship

(Reuters News, 20 Oct 2019) Extinction Rebellion activists were doused with mock crude oil to protest sponsorship of the National Portrait Gallery by oil company BP, capping a two-week "uprising".

Visitors to a London portrait gallery were treated to an impromptu performance on Sunday whenthree semi-naked climate activists were doused with mock crude oil in a protest against arts sponsorship by British oil company BP. 

The unauthorised stunt at the National Portrait Gallery capped a two-week wave of actions by civil disobedience movement Extinction Rebellion, which led to more than 3,300 arrests in London and cities around the world, the group said.

Activists spread a white sheet over the floor of the main hall of the gallery's Ondaatje wing before two women and a man wearing only skin-coloured underwear adopted foetal positions on the covering.

Protesters then slowly doused the prone performers with washable black liquid as activist Eden Rickson read a poem asking the gallery to stop accepting sponsorship money from BP.

"We cannot be artists on a dead planet...Yet right now the National Portrait Gallery is tied to a company brutally funding the end of our world," Rickson said.

"With compassion, we ask you to change. Oil means the end, but art means the beginning."

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Reuters News, 20 Oct 2019: A crude performance: Semi-naked climate activists protest BP art sponsorship