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Nancy Goldin and friends
Nancy ‘Nan’ Goldin (centre) with Fred Bladou, of French NGO Aides, at the Louvre protest. Photograph: Stéphane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty
Nancy ‘Nan’ Goldin (centre) with Fred Bladou, of French NGO Aides, at the Louvre protest. Photograph: Stéphane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty

Artist Nan Goldin protests against Sackler wing at the Louvre

This article is more than 5 years old

Activist urges Paris gallery to drop name of family accused of profiting from opioid crisis

The US art photographer and activist Nan Goldin has led a protest outside the Louvre in Paris demanding that the world’s most visited museum change the name of its Sackler wing because some of the multibillionaire family of art philanthropists benefited from the business of addictive prescription painkillers.

In recent months Goldin has taken part in protests at US museums and threatened UK gallery boycotts over donations from one branch of the Sackler family, which is accused of profiting from the US opioid crisis as the owners of the American pharmaceutical company that makes the highly addictive prescription painkiller OxyContin.

The Louvre demonstration on Monday was the first time Goldin had taken her international campaign to France. The artist waded into the fountains beneath the Louvre’s pyramid with more than a dozen activists carrying red banners stating: “Take down the Sackler name.”

About 40 protesters chanted, “Shame on Sackler” as crowds of tourists looked on. One activist lay down in the fountain and others played dead around the edge.

The Louvre’s Sackler wing is made up of 12 rooms of near eastern antiquities, including key pieces from the museum’s Persian collection. The Sackler name is prominent at many global art institutions as a result of financial support given by the family.

The Louvre confirmed that the Theresa and Mortimer Sackler foundation had donated to the refurbishment of its rooms of Persian and Levantine art in the period 1996 to 1997. No donation from the Sackler family has been made to the museum since.

Demonstrators from the campaign group Pain (Prescription Addiction Intervention Now) said they believed that the Louvre was not contractually bound in perpetuity to display the Sackler name. They urged it to be the first major museum to remove the name from its galleries.

Goldin said: “The museum world must act. I hope the Louvre understands that artists and activists are mobilised to get the name removed, and the Louvre could be the first museum to take the Sackler name down. Often there’s a domino effect among museums and galleries.”

In March, London’s National Portrait Gallery became the first major art institution to drop a plan for a grant from the Sackler family, in a move that campaigners said was a landmark victory in the battle over the ethics of arts funding.

Activists hold protest banners in front of the pyramid of the Louvre museum in Paris on Monday. Photograph: Stéphane de Sakutin/AFP/Getty Images

The gallery said it had been jointly agreed with the branch of the Sackler family whose company makes OxyContin that it would “not proceed at this time” with a £1m donation. Goldin has also staged protests at the Guggenheim and Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Goldin said: “The Louvre is one of the world’s greatest museums and one of the most visited museums on Earth. It has 12 Sackler rooms. But this crisis has killed hundreds of thousands of Americans and it’s coming Europe’s way. This is an emergency.”

During the protest, Goldin, who currently has work on show at a modern art exhibition at the Palace of Versailles, wore her medal, the Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres, an honorary award from the French state for her art. “It’s the first time I’ve worn it,” she said.

Goldin began her campaign against the Sacklers after she became addicted to powerful prescription painkillers. She has since demanded that arts institutions in the US and Britain refuse further Sackler donations and argued that the family should instead pay for treatment and rehabilitation for opioid addicts.

The Louvre security guards allowed the protest to take place peacefully for more than 30 minutes before the activists moved away of their own accord.

Goldin said she would seek a meeting with museum staff to discuss the campaign to rename the Sackler wing.

A spokesperson from the Louvre confirmed that about 15 people were involved in the protest inside the fountain, but declined to comment further.

Representatives for the members of the Sackler family who own Purdue declined to comment.

This article was amended on 3 July 2019 to clarify a reference to the decision to drop a proposed donation to London’s National Portrait Gallery by some Sackler family members – the gallery and the family members said it had been a joint decision.

More on this story

More on this story

  • V&A Dundee erases mentions of opioid-linked Sackler family

  • King’s College London cuts ties with opioids-linked Sackler family

  • Oxford University cuts ties with Sackler family over links with opioids

  • British Museum removes Sackler family name from galleries

  • Science Museum 'hiding dirty money' over £2m Sackler donation

  • Artist Nan Goldin leads die-in at V&A over use of Sackler name

  • Two major London theatres reject funds from Sackler Trust

  • US opioid epidemic: multibillion-dollar deal may be near in lawsuits

  • Dear Sackler family, your greed turned my son into a quadriplegic

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