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‘Michelangelo’s David statue won’t fall down’

Florence's museums authority on Tuesday played down the risk of Michelangelo's 500-year-old David statue falling down because of fractures in its ankles.

'Michelangelo's David statue won't fall down'
Florence's museums authority has played down the risk of Michelangelo's David statue falling down because of fractures in its ankles. Photo: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP

"Even if there is an earthquake of 5.0 or 5.5 on the Richter scale, Florence will stay in one piece. And David would be the last to fall," Marco Ferri, a spokesman for the authority, said.

A study by Italy's National Research Council last week pointed to "a series of micro-fractures on the lower part of both legs" and said this "threatened its stability".

The report said the weaknesses were likely linked to the period between when the statue was completed in 1504 and installed on the Piazza della Signoria and when it was moved to a museum for safekeeping in 1873.

The statue was replaced on the square with a copy.

The study said that the pedestal was at a slight tilt of up to five degrees, putting pressure on the statue.

But Ferri said there was "nothing dramatic about the findings" and the museum would continue monitoring vibrations of the work as it has already been doing.

He said the vibrations have gone down since the number of visitors allowed in at one time is now limited.

Florence's museums had more than five million visitors last year, with many visiting David and the Uffizi Gallery.

"It will not be moved or put on a pneumatic pedestal or anything like that. Apart from anything else, it would be complicated to move a colossus like that," he said.

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STATUE

Denmark’s top art school head sacked over royal bust stunt

The head of Denmark's top art school has been sacked over the drowning of a bust of a former king in a Copenhagen canal, the culture ministry said Monday.

Denmark's top art school head sacked over royal bust stunt
The bust of King Frederik V after being thrown into Copenhagen Harbour in November. Photo: Philip Davali/Ritzau Scanpix

Artist Katrine Dirckinck-Holmfeld lost her job when she took a replica bust of the 18th-century monarch Frederik V from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, where she was employed, and dumped it to draw attention to the country's colonial past and its involvement in the slave trade, especially in modern day Ghana.

The action, which she called a “happening,” was initially carried out anonymously. Dirckinck-Holmfeld was removed from her post the day she came forward as the responsible party.

The scandal on Monday claimed the scalp of the Academy's director Kirsten Langkilde, who had sent an internal mail with a link to the video of the bust being dumped without any comment, just saying “Have a good weekend”.

“The culture ministry and Kirsten Langkilde have not been able to come to an agreement on the challenges facing the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts.

There is therefore the need for new energy,” Culture Minister Joy Mogensen said.

The event, which took place on November 6th, was recorded in a video and the group Anonymous Artists claimed responsibility before Dirckinck-Holmfeld stepped forward.

Anonymous Artists said the action was to show “solidarity with all the artists, students and people all over the world who have had to live with the aftermath of Danish colonialism.”

At its peak, Denmark's colonies were spread across four continents from the Danish West Indies in the modern-day US Virgin Islands, to the Danish Gold Coast, now a part of Ghana.

Its holdings also included Greenland, which remains part of Denmark, and territories in India.

READ ALSO: 'Racist fish': Little Mermaid statue vandalised in Copenhagen

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