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Yerofeyev said the aim of the "Forbidden Art" exhibit, which comprised works that had been banned from shows at major museums and galleries in 2006, was to show the reality of censorship. Religion was not the intended theme, he said. The Mickey Mouse as Jesus painting was intended to illustrate the mixing up of facts in a child's mind, he said. A child hears about the Bible from his parents while watching Mickey Mouse cartoons. In a letter sent last month to Patriarch Kirill, Yerofeyev apologized if the exhibit unintentionally offended Orthodox Christians, but he defended the right of artists to use religious symbols in their work. He also criticized the church for joining forces with extreme nationalists. The Russian Orthodox Church continues to stand behind the case against the two curators. "They should be punished," The Rev. Vsevolod Chaplin, a church spokesman, said this week. Samodurov said the church was much more involved in this case than it was when charges were brought against him over the 2003 exhibit. Rights activists see the trial as a sign of the expanding influence of the Russian Orthodox Church. "The church has become an instrument of censorship like it was during czarist times," said Gleb Yakunin, 76, a priest and Soviet-era dissident who has broken with the church. "It wants to control culture." Lyudmila Alexeyeva, 82, a veteran rights activist who chairs the Moscow Helsinki Group, said she had little hope the defendants would be cleared, given the power of the church. "I am very afraid for them," she said. "The church is now younger, more energetic." Artists, rights activists, journalists and opposition figures have signed several open letters calling for the charges to be dropped. The latest letter, signed by some of the biggest names in Russian art, was sent last Friday to President Dmitry Medvedev. "We are sure that a guilty verdict for Yerofeyev and Samodurov would be a verdict for all Russian contemporary art and would become one more step in establishing open and secret forms of cultural censorship," the letter said. Leonid Bazhanov, director of the National Contemporary Art Center, said a guilty verdict would make Russia less competitive in the world art market. Foreign artists would be wary of bringing their works to Russia, while more Russian artists would leave the country, he said. Marat Gelman, who owns a major Moscow gallery, said if the two curators were convicted, he would mount a new exhibit of works from "Forbidden Art." "I will try to answer with strong actions in order to be heard," Gelman said.
[Associated
Press;
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