Jimmy Carr, the show’s host, will chair a debate on whether an artwork can ever really be separated from its creator. At the end, the audience will vote on whether Carr should destroy the work.
If the audience decides to destroy the painting by Hitler, it will be shredded, a Channel 4 spokesman told CNN.
“Jimmy Carr Destroys Art” is due to air on October 24. Credit: Rob Parfitt/Channel 4
Other artworks on the show, however, “might be torched by a flamethrower,” the spokesman said.
But the announced plans for “Jimmy Carr Destroys Art” — due to air on October 24 — have provoked strong criticism.
The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust accused the show of “making Hitler a topic of light entertainment.”
“There is nothing entertaining or laughable about Hitler or the murder of 6 million Jews, and the persecution of millions more,” Olivia Marks-Woldman, chief executive of the trust, said in a statement to CNN.
“This is deeply inappropriate, and at a time of increasing Holocaust distortion, dangerously trivializing,” she said.
In a statement to CNN, Channel 4 defended the show, calling it “a thoughtful and nuanced exploration of the limits of free expression in art, and whether work by morally despicable artists still deserves to be seen.”
The Channel 4 spokesman said the show “speaks directly to the current debate around cancel culture and is in a long tradition of Channel 4 programming.”
The state-owned but commercially funded channel was founded 40 years ago to give UK viewers an edgy alternative to the two main channels, BBC and ITV.
“The question of how far art can be linked to its creators is an important one, but this program is simply a stunt for shock value,” she said.
“Choosing Jimmy Carr to front this episode is deliberately provocative and inflammatory given his history of using the murder of Roma and Sinti people by the Nazis and their collaborators for comedic gain,” said Marks-Woldman.
CNN has reached out to Jimmy Carr’s representatives for comment.
Source: www.cnn.com