Cecilia Gimenez was mocked across the globe for her ‘restoration’ of a century-old painting
An 82-year-old Spanish woman whose botched restoration of a painting of an old painting made her a global laughing stock, is to reap nearly half the
riches from worldwide merchandising of the monkey-like image.
Cecilia Gimenez took it upon herself a year ago to fix up Ecce Homo (Behold the Man), a flaking, century-old fresco of Christ painted on a pillar in a church in Borja, northeastern Spain.
The touched-up result resembled a pale-faced ape with cartoon-style eyes and mouth and a crooked smudge for a mouth; so bad it became an instant internet hit, imitated and pilloried around the world.
The incident also left Gimenez feeling suicidal, and she became a recluse for some time.
In the past year, some 57,000 people have descended on the church, Santuario de Misericordia, to be photographed with the artistic disaster, which everyone found hilarious, according to a charitable foundation running the church.
The church foundation, owned by Borja town hall, started charging one euro ($1.40) for each visitor to help pay for the upkeep of the painting and to finance its charitable work. But the big money could come from selling the rights to use the image on anything from bottles of beverages to coffee mugs and T-shirts.
Under a deal being signed on Wednesday, Gimenez gets 49 per cent of the profit from marketing of the image with the rest going to the foundation, Borja deputy mayor and cultural chief Juan Maria Ojeda told AFP.
No longer mocked, the elderly artist has just held a well-received exhibition of her own paintings in Borja but has no wish to get rich herself, said her lawyer, Antonio Val-Carreres. “All the profits will go for charitable uses by the foundation and by Cecilia,” he told AFP.
GMT 15:58 2018 Tuesday ,04 December
Multimedia works vie for Britain's 2018 Turner Prize for artGMT 11:06 2018 Sunday ,02 December
Germany's Bundestag approves co-financing Egypt's new Minya MuseumGMT 13:55 2018 Monday ,26 November
Bosra City restores its historical splendor and starts to receive its visitors againGMT 15:13 2018 Thursday ,22 November
Rehabilitation of al-Buzuriyah archaeological Souq to preserve its aesthetic featuresGMT 16:37 2018 Wednesday ,14 November
Mosaic painting dating back to Roman era uncovered in Homs northern countrysideGMT 14:37 2018 Sunday ,11 November
Egypt unearths 7 pharaonic tombs in Saqqara Necropolis near capital CairoGMT 12:05 2018 Thursday ,08 November
Israeli archaeologists reveal 2,000-year-old engravings of ships, animalsGMT 15:27 2018 Wednesday ,07 November
Louvre Abu Dhabi unveils Roads of Arabia exhibitionMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor