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Washington, DC climate protesters drag paint on glass cover of art sculpture

Washington, D.C. climate protesters were handcuffed on Thursday after dragging paint on a glass cover protecting artwork at the National Gallery of Art.

Climate protesters in Washington, D.C. were handcuffed on Thursday after they dragged paint on a glass cover protecting an art sculpture.

The incident happened at the National Gallery of Art by the activism group Declare Emergency in an attempt to bring attention to climate change, according to the Washington Post.

After two people from the group smeared their hands across the glass covering of Edgar Degas’s "Little Dancer Aged Fourteen," they were removed by police in handcuffs.

One of the individuals taken into custody wasn't issued any criminal charges but is banned from the museum for life, according to a tweet from the group.

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The group tweeted that they wanted to send a message about climate change.

"Around 11 am today two parents who are terrified about their children’s futures (as well as all children) made a statement at the National Gallery in DC. Climate change will cause famine, floods, droughts and destruction unless we act now," Declare Emergency tweeted.

In response to criticism on Twitter, the group tweeted that it's a "complete moral failure of our government to protect its own citizens."

Tuesday's climate protest is hardly the first time that an activism group has defaced artwork in attempts to bring attention to their cause.

In March, German climate activists defaced a work of art near the country's parliament.

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Members of The Last Generation appeared to have thrown black liquid over glass plates which displayed 19 articles of the German Constitution.

In a statement, the German group said that its government wasn't protecting citizens' "fundamental rights" because of the country's use of fossil fuels.

Parliament Speaker Bärbel Bas harshly criticized the protest.

"Those are the fundamental rights on which the demonstrators from Last Generation themselves base the justification for their actions," Bas said in a statement. "I can only hope that the glass plates of the artwork were not permanently damaged."

Fox News Digital reached out to Declare Emergency for comment.

Fox News' Timothy Nerozzi contributed to this report.

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