Entertainment

Celebrating the botched fresco: Spanish town Borja opening new centre

More than three years after a botched fresco restoration by an octogenarian painter became a major tourist attraction for a northern Spanish town, local officials are looking to inject new life into the phenomenon by opening a centre that celebrates the fresco.

Borja mayor says initial story drew 160,000 visitors to see botched fresco

According to Borja Mayor Eduardo Arilla, 160,000 visitors came to see the Ecce Homo fresco at the town sanctuary after the story of Cecilia Gimenez's botched restoration went viral in 2012. He said with the new centre, the town hoped to keep attracting up to 30,000 visitors annually. (Cesar Manso/AFP/Getty Images)

More than three years after a botched fresco restoration by an octogenarian painter became a major tourist attraction for a northern Spanish town, local officials are looking to inject new life into the phenomenon by opening a centre that celebrates the fresco.

Borja Mayor Eduardo Arilla said 160,000 people had come to see the fresco since the story of Cecilia Gimenez's restoration of a Christ fresco in a town sanctuary went viral in 2012. He said with the new centre, the town hoped to keep attracting up to 30,000 visitors annually.

Gimenez became a sensation when pictures spread on the Internet of an Ecce Homo (Behold the Man) mural she disfigured while trying to restore it. Twitter users redubbed it Ecce Mono (Behold the Monkey).

An image of Ecce Homo (Behold the Man), painted in 1910 by artist Elias Garcia Martinez directly on a column in the church, is shown alongside Gimenez's well-intentioned but ham-fisted amateur restoration.

"It's to give the painting a new impetus," Arilla told The Associated Press.

He said Gimenez, 85, will be at the inauguration later Wednesday, along with the granddaughter of the little-known Spanish painter of the near 100-year-old original, Elias Garcia Martinez.

The new centre will bring together stories, photographs and videos documenting the impact of the restoration. Visitors will be able to see the fresco in the adjoining chapel — and for those feeling inspired, there will be canvases to try to paint your own version.

The centre will also display the fresco's new official merchandise — ranging from T-shirts to teacups — which also will be available on Amazon. Proceeds are to be split between Gimenez and the sanctuary's home for retirees.

Gimenez became a sensation when pictures of her so-called restoration spread on the Internet, where users redubbed the work Ecce Mono (Behold the Monkey).