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Russian Court Convicts German Sculptor in Absentia for Depicting Putin and Patriarch in Sex Act

April 2 (Reuters) – German sculptor Jacques ⁠Tilly, ⁠the creator of a ⁠carnival float showing Russian President Vladimir Putin and Orthodox ​Church Patriarch Kirill engaging in a sex act, was sentenced in absentia by ‌a Moscow court on Thursday ‌to eight years and six months in prison.

Independent news outlet SOTAvision ⁠reported that ⁠the court had found Tilly guilty of spreading “false information” about ​the military and insulting religious believers.

The case also featured a 2024 interview with Deutsche Welle in which Tilly condemned what he called “all the bloody crimes committed ​by the Russian military” in Ukraine.

Tilly, who is famed for his provocative ⁠carnival ⁠creations, had denounced the ⁠charges as ​an assault on freedom of expression.

Judge Konstantin Ochirov of Moscow’s Basmanny Court ​sentenced Tilly to serve ⁠the term in a penal colony, pay a fine of 200,000 roubles ($2,490) and be barred from administering websites for four years, none of which are enforceable as he does not reside in Russia.

SOTAvision said prosecutors had ⁠read out identical testimony from three witnesses who said they were outraged ⁠by the sculpture but did not appear in court.

It said an expert witness had testified that the figures depicted – a man in military uniform and a clergyman – were “undoubtedly Vladimir Putin and Patriarch Kirill”.

Among Tilly’s other creations are a float showing Putin wallowing in blood in a bathtub in the blue and yellow colours of the Ukrainian flag. Another depicted him and U.S. President Donald ⁠Trump devouring Europe.

Tilly has told Reuters his floats are intended to provoke and challenge political power, targeting a range of leaders including Putin, Trump and Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan.

(Reporting by Anna ​Peverieri in Barcelona and Kirsti Knolle in Berlin; Editing ​by Mark Trevelyan and Alison Williams)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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