Masked man attacks controversial statue at BBC HQ with hammer
Metropolitan Police says specialist officers have been called to the scene
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Your support makes all the difference.A masked man has attacked a statue on the front of the BBCās Broadcasting House in central London with a hammer and chisel.
It comes days after repair work was started to the previously-attacked Grade II listed statue, of Prospero and Ariel from Shakespeareās The Tempest by Eric Gill, who is said to have sexually abused two of his daughters.
A man wearing a Spider-Man mask was seen on scaffolding surrounding the sculpture on Saturday.
He had also strung up a banner criticising the corporation.
He was described as a āmasked protesterā in a BBC Radio London news bulletin on Saturday.
The statue has been on display at Broadcasting House since 1932 but was attacked last year amid calls for it to be removed.
The Metropolitan Police were called at around 4.15amĀ on Saturday to reports of a man climbing scaffolding at premises in Portland Place.
A policeĀ spokesman said: āThe man was reportedly damaging a sculpture. Officers attended the location.
āIt has not been possible to safely detain the man given the circumstances of the incident, including the height.
āSpecialist officers have been called to the scene.ā
The statue has previously been targeted with a hammer.
On Tuesday, the BBC said after ācareful considerationā taking into account the historical and cultural significance of the building and after discussions with leading cultural organisations such as Historic England, the repair work was agreed with all costs covered through the corporationās insurance and not the licence fee.
Scaffolding went up around the building on Tuesday with expert stonemasons beginning to restore the work, carved from Caen stone, a type of limestone quarried in north-west France.
The broadcaster said the repair work would be used to provideĀ additional context about the artwork andĀ Gill, and thatĀ members of the public would also be able to access a QR code nearby.
Robert Seatter, head of BBC History, said: āBroadcasting House is a building of historical and cultural significance and one of the foundations of modern-day broadcasting, both in this country and around the world.
āWe have a responsibility to maintain and preserve the building for generations to come.
āAlongside this, Gillās abusive behaviour and lifestyle are well documented and the BBC in no way condones his behaviour.
āSo while it is right that the fabric of the building is restored, we must also ensure people are fully informed about the history connected to it.ā
Gill was among the most prominent sculptors of the 20th century until his death in 1940 but his diaries, published much later, detailed the sexual abuse of his daughters.
A biography on the Tate museum website said: āHis religious views and subject matter contrast with his sexual behaviour, including his erotic art, and (as mentioned in his own diaries) his extramarital affairs and sexual abuse of his daughters, sisters and dog.ā
More than 3,000 people have signed a petition demanding the removal of the sculpture on the website of the political activist group 38 Degrees.
The repairs had been set to be completed by the end of June.