In Russia today, two organizers of the 2007 Forbidden Art exhibit at the Sakharov Museum in Moscow were found guilty "committing acts aimed at inciting national hatred and strife," according to reports by BBC News and the Moscow News. Designed to display works of art that had been banned from major museums in 2006, the exhibit included several paintings of Jesus. In one, Jesus' disciples were depicted as Mickey Mouse; in another, the crucified Jesus' head was replaced by the Order of Lenin medal. Complaints over the exhibit were filed by the Russian Orthodox Church and an ultra-nationalist group. (See prior posting.) While the defendants faced possible prison sentences, they were instead merely fined. The Tagansky District Court fined Yury Samodurov, former head of the Sakharov Museum, 200,000 rubles ($6500), while contemporary art expert Andrei Yerofeyev was fined 150,000 rubles ($4870). Last month Yerofeyev wrote the Russian Orthodox Church apologizing for any unintentional offense cause to Christians by the show. Last week 13 prominent Russian artists had appealed to Russian President Dimitry Medvedev to stop the trial.
UPDATE: CBC News (7/19) reports that Samodurov and Yerofeyev plan to appeal their convictions to the Russian Supreme Court and, if unsuccessful there, to the European Court of Human Rights.