An image of an angel with a face resembling the right-wing Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni has been erased from a fresco in a Rome church after officials at the Vatican complained about the controversial work Photo: Remo Casilli/ Reuters
A fresco resembling the Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni has caused a right rumpus in Italy. The La Repubblica newspaper spotted the angel with a face resembling the right-wing Italian politician in the chapel of the Basilica of St Lawrence in Lucina in the heart of Rome.
The artist Bruno Valentinetti, who was restoring the work, was accused of painting the Meloni cherub but repeatedly denied making the angelic depiction. He eventually told the press: “It was Meloni, but along the lines of the painting that was there before.”
The mystery deepened when the Meloni work was removed, with Valentinetti admitting that he “covered the face because the Vatican told me to. The Curia [the administrative body of the Holy See] wanted it that way, and I erased it.”
The Five Star Movement, a political party opposed to Meloni’s Fratelli d’Italia party, meanwhile added that art must not become “a tool for propaganda”. Who knew that a cherub could be so shocking?
The White House intern who hit the headlines in the 1990s says she gave up her 'portrait virginity' to the provocative New York-based artist
French president Emmanuel Macron was apparently not amused by artwork depicting him beheaded
'Luce' will welcome visitors to special events in the Holy See and Rome this year
Italian government approves display of sculptural icon in new boarding area

source