‘Queen’s vagina’ sculpture at Versailles is defaced with anti-Semitic graffiti

A huge controversial sculpture by artist Anish Kapoor on display in the gardens of the Palace of Versailles - and informally dubbed the “queen’s vagina” – has been vandalised again, this time by anti-Semitic graffiti, officials said.
The giant sculpture was attacked in June and then cleaned, but Kapoor said that this time the graffitti would remain on the work, to bear witness to hatred.
Officially known as “Dirty Corner,” the sculpture comprises a huge steel funnel that the 61-year-old British-Indian artist has described as “very sexual.”
It and the rocks around it were sprayed in white paint with phrases such as “SS blood sacrifice,” “Queen sacrificed, twice insulted,” “the second RAPE of the nation by DEVIANT JEWISH activism” and “Christ is king in Versailles,” the palace management said on Sunday.
President Francois Hollande condemned the vandalism as “hateful and anti-Semitic” and Prime Minister Manuel Valls took to Twitter to say he felt disgust and warn the perpetrators would be severely punished.
Culture Minister Fleur Pellerin said the vandalism was an “attack on freedom of creation” and the phrases were “unacceptable.”