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Friday 27 February 2026 05:02

Rome restores tusk snapped off Bernini elephant statue

Incident raises concerns about Italy's precious cultural heritage in public spaces.Rome preservation experts have completed a delicate restoration on the Elephant and Obelisk sculpture, designed by Italian Baroque masterĀ Gian Lorenzo Bernini.Technicians from the capitoline superintendency re-attached the marble tip of the right tusk of the 17th-century "elefantino" after it wasĀ snapped offĀ last week. The 11-centimetre fragment of tusk was found at the base of the sculpture in the central Piazza della Minerva, near the Pantheon, on the night of 16 February. Investigators have been studying video surveillance footage to determine whether the breakage was the result of vandalism or structural fatigue, however the circumstances surrounding theĀ incident remain unclear. Restoration process Technical assessments confirmed that the fractured fragment was not part of Bernini's original 1667 marble but was a resin-and-marble-dust addition from a 1977 restoration. This same section had previously beenĀ broken in 2016Ā and subsequently reattached. The restoration process involved securing the recovered fragment with specialised structural adhesives and finishing the surface with a lime-based mortar to ensure aesthetic continuity. Debate Commissioned by Pope Alexander VII, the monument features an Egyptian obelisk from the 6th century BC mounted on the back of a marble elephant. Italian culture minister Alessandro Giuli condemned the breakage as an "absurd act of barbarity," occurring just days after aĀ major Bernini exhibitionĀ opened at Palazzo Barberini. The incident has reignited debate about the precarious balance between free access to art and the need to protect fragile works in public spaces. Photo Wanted in Rome Ā  Ā 

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Rome preservation experts have completed a delicate restoration on the Elephant and Obelisk sculpture, designed by Italian Baroque masterĀ 
Gian Lorenzo Bernini
. Technicians from the capitoline superintendency re-attached the marble tip of the right tusk of the 17th-century "elefantino" after it wasĀ 
snapped off
Ā last week. The 11-centimetre fragment of tusk was found at the base of the sculpture in the central Piazza della Minerva, near the Pantheon, on the night of 16 February. Investigators have been studying video surveillance footage to determine whether the breakage was the result of vandalism or structural fatigue, however the circumstances surrounding theĀ incident remain unclear. Technical assessments confirmed that the fractured fragment was not part of Bernini's original 1667 marble but was a resin-and-marble-dust addition from a 1977 restoration. This same section had previously beenĀ 
broken in 2016
Ā and subsequently reattached. The restoration process involved securing the recovered fragment with specialised structural adhesives and finishing the surface with a lime-based mortar to ensure aesthetic continuity. Commissioned by Pope Alexander VII, the monument features an Egyptian obelisk from the 6th century BC mounted on the back of a marble elephant. Italian culture minister Alessandro Giuli condemned the breakage as an "absurd act of barbarity," occurring just days after aĀ 
major Bernini exhibition
Ā opened at Palazzo Barberini. The incident has reignited debate about the precarious balance between free access to art and the need to protect fragile works in public spaces. Photo Wanted in Rome Ā  Ā 
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