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Gallery defends removing Joko portrait

The National Portrait Gallery has explained why it has taken a photograph of Indonesian President Joko Widodo off its walls.

An attendant prepares to place a portrait.

The National Portrait Gallery says the removal of a portrait of Joko Widodo was for fear of damage. (AAP)

A photograph of Indonesian President Joko Widodo has been removed from the walls of the National Portrait Gallery for fear it would be damaged.

Director Angus Trumble said it was a pre-emptive and temporary measure, following a negative reaction to the portrait by some visitors.

"In view of the circumstances ... and my best assessment of the risk of damage to the work of art, it was necessary to remove it from public display", he said in a statement on Thursday, noting the disapproval of the artist Adam Ferguson.

Mr Ferguson, who is reportedly in Nepal at the moment, said he was perplexed by the decision.

He said he would have thought that allowing people to engage with his work now would be more important given the circumstances.

"I am totally perplexed that a leading Australian artistic institution would take such action," he wrote on his Facebook page.

"Art is about a social and political dialogue."


1 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP


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