Severed limbs and screaming people in glasses: The pedophile and cannibalistic-looking paintings by the so-called artist Lena Cronqvist were allowed to be displayed at the beginning of the year as part of an exhibition in the European Parliament in Brussels. The disgusting depictions not only allow a deep look into the apparently badly damaged psyche of the artist – her exhibition in the EU Parliament also once again illustrates the massive decline in values of the self-proclaimed western values.
In her naively painted pictures, the Swedish artist, born in 1938, prefers to depict children doing violence to others or suffering violence themselves:
1/2. 🚨👁 Art exhibitions organized by elite organizations reveal how deeply sick and troubled these people really are. Here are the paintings that were on display inside the #EuropeanParliament in #Brussels. The exhibition featured paintings by Lena Birgitta Cronqvist Tunström. pic.twitter.com/SGm47QdR1L
— The informant (@theinformantofc) February 26, 2023
Lena Cronqvist (b. 1938) is a prominent figure in Scandinavian art. For sixty years she has created life stories through paintings, graphics, sculptures and textiles. She delves into the unpleasant aspects of childhood, motherhood, illness and loss. pic.twitter.com/96mEFdpuIi
— O~BlackBetty🇺🇸 (@BabyD1111229) March 12, 2023
Part 2, of the macabre works of Lena birgitta cronqvist, most of them exhibited in the European parliament. 🤮 pic.twitter.com/0uUr63ey4P
— Hijueputa Soros (@HijueputaSoros) March 10, 2023
The painter- “artist” is swedish and very famous….Lena Cronqvist. She have some disturbing thought on childrens behaviour. Or she might just be telling the truth of of children being evil pic.twitter.com/tgPqceVfBj
— the staff. Eriksson (@XStaffan) March 7, 2023
The leaders of EU politics seem to find these images perfectly suited to serve as a figurehead for the Union – otherwise the decision to allow Cronqvist the exhibition in Parliament can hardly be explained. In the social networks, the majority of users were stunned. Criticism was not long in coming from MPs either. Aurélia Beigneux from the Identity and Democracy Group wrote a question to Parliament on January 31, in which she strongly criticized the exhibition of the questionable paintings and asked the European Commission if it would not do better to support the fight against child abuse:
“Works by Swedish painter, graphic artist and sculptor Lena Birgitta Cronqvist Tunström are currently on display in the corridors of the European Parliament in Brussels. Created by an artist unmistakably drawing inspiration from the macabre, these highly questionable pieces are in full view of all who walk by.
Lena Cronqvist’s supposedly artistic world features naked adults alongside children and infants being disemboweled or placed in jars, and the artist has no qualms about immersing herself in these truly morbid scenes. The artist’s perverse obsessions, which in themselves are morally reprehensible, should never have been displayed in the European Parliament, especially at a time when child abuse and crimes against children remain a major problem for EU citizens.
In light of the above:
1. Is the Commission aware of Lena Cronqvist’s other ‘works’?
2. Has this artist received financial support from the Commission and if so, how much?
3. What does the Commission intend to do to combat child abuse and crime against children?”