Animal rights group in Britain targets King Charles portrait, sticks cartoon images on it

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epa11404202 A handout photo made available by animal rights group Animal Rising shows an activist affixing posters onto the painting of King Charles III at Philip Mould gallery in London, Britain, 11 June 2024. One of the posters was placed over the king's face with British character 'Wallace', from the Aardman stop-motion animated series 'Wallace and Gromit', and another with a speech bubble reading 'No Cheese Gromit. Look At All This Cruelty On RSPCA Farms!'. According to Animal Rising, the activists gave a 'comedic redecoration' of the king's portrait to highlight the 'cruelty' on RSPCA 'assured' farms the group had exposed over the previous weekend. The gallery said that no damage had been done to the portrait.  EPA-EFE/ANIMAL RISING HANDOUT -- MANDATORY CREDIT -- BEST QUALITY AVAILABLE --  HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES

An activist sticking posters onto a portrait of King Charles III at a gallery in London, on June 11.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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LONDON - Animal rights activists on June 11 targeted

the first official portrait of Britain's King Charles

since he became monarch, pasting a large image of the well-known animated character Wallace over his face, in a protest about welfare on farms.

Footage from campaign group Animal Rising showed two of its supporters approach the portrait in London's Philip Mould gallery, and overlay the king's face with a big cartoon image of Wallace from the Wallace And Gromit animated comedy franchise.

They also pasted a large speech bubble, saying: "No cheese, Gromit. Look at all this cruelty on RSPCA farms!"

The aim of the supporters' actions, Animal Rising said, was to highlight cruelty on farms granted "Assured" status, a guarantee of higher welfare standards, by the RSPCA animal charity, of which King Charles is the patron.

The RSPCA was not impressed.

"We are shocked by this vandalism of His Majesty King, our Patron’s, portrait. We welcome scrutiny of our work, but we cannot condone illegal activity of any kind," an RSPCA spokesperson said, adding the charity took any allegations about its Assured certified farms seriously.

The attack is the latest by activists on artwork in Britain. Climate protesters attempted to smash the case holding an original Magna Carta text in the British Library in May, and threw soup over Vincent van Gogh's painting Sunflowers at London's National Gallery in October.

Mr Daniel Juniper, one of the two activists involved, said in a statement on the group's website: "With King Charles being such a big fan of Wallace and Gromit, we couldn’t think of a better way to draw his attention to the horrific scenes on RSPCA Assured farms."

He hoped Charles would "seriously reconsider if he wants to be associated with the awful suffering across farms being endorsed by the RSPCA."

Buckingham Palace said it had no comment.

Animal Rising said its posters would be easily removable without causing damage to the painting.

The portrait of Charles, by artist Jonathan Yeo, received a mixed reception after its unveiling in May, with some criticising its vibrant red colour. REUTERS

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