PARIS – A new stamp emblazoned with the face of Marianne, France’s revolutionary symbol, has caused a stir after its creator said it was inspired by a Ukrainian feminist known for topless protests.
The stamp, unveiled by President Francois Hollande on Sunday’s national day, shows the face of a youthful, dewy-eyed Marianne from the shoulders up, her long hair flowing down and her hand raised.
“For all those who ask who the model was for Marianne, it’s a mix of several women, but particularly Inna Shevchenko,” Olivier Ciappa, one of the stamp’s designers, said on Twitter.
The 23-year-old Shevchenko, a Ukrainian who has been granted political asylum in France, is the leader of the French branch of Femen, a self-declared “radical feminist” group known for its topless protests against sexual exploitation of women, sexism and religious institutions.
Speaking on Monday after his Twitter comment caused a stir among France’s conservatives, Ciappa reiterated that the Marianne portrait was inspired by “a mix of real people.”
Aside from Shevchenko, he also pointed to actress Marion Cotillard and Justice Minister Christiane Taubira as sources of inspiration for the stamp, which was co-designed by artist David Kawena. “For me, Marianne, who is represented bare-breasted, would probably have been a Femen in 1789 (during the French Revolution) because she fought for the republic’s values — liberty, equality and fraternity,” Ciappa said. “Inna is the only one among those who inspired me who is not French.”
The French Spring, a grouping of gay marriage opponents, lambasted what it called the “new Marianne.”
“Are there not enough beautiful and emblematic women in France that we have to import our models from Ukraine?” it lamented on Twitter.
Shevchenko, who came to France last August, said she had been unaware she was an inspiration for the stamp.
“France always recognized women fighting. . . . (It) is a symbol for all the world,” said the activist, who fears persecution in Ukraine after sawing down a wooden cross in Kyiv, in a stunt intended to support Russian jailed punk band Pussy Riot. “Now all homophobes, extremists, fascists will have to lick my ass when they want to send a letter.”
Marianne was not a real person but has become a symbol of the French Revolution and of freedom, providing inspiration for countless statues, sculptures and paintings. Wearing a bonnet and always bare-breasted, she has also been a fixture of French stamps for decades, and artists are regularly asked to design new versions of the revolutionary symbol.
She is perhaps best known as the woman waving a French flag in Eugene Delacroix’s famous painting “Liberty Leading the People.”
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