“Erecting a statue of a man’s hot dream of what a woman should look like is unlikely to promote many women’s acceptance of their own bodies.”

So wrote Sørine Gotfredsen, a priest and journalist, in the Danish newspaper Berlingske. The 13-foot statue, a voluptuous stone mermaid, has “caused controversy for years due to its exaggerated figure”, said The Independent.

But now it will reportedly be removed from Dragør Fort in Copenhagen because it “does not align with the cultural heritage of the 1910 landmark”, said The Guardian.

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Copenhagen, a few hundred yards from the world-famous “Little Mermaid” statue. But the bigger mermaid was removed after locals reportedly complained that it was “too sexualised”, said The Telegraph.

It was then moved in 2018 to Dragør Fort, part of Copenhagen’s former sea fortifications, until the Danish agency for palaces and culture “intervened in March, requesting its removal”, said The Guardian. Mathias Kryger, art critic for the Politiken newspaper, called the statue “ugly and pornographic”.

But the “Big Mermaid” is “arguably a bit less naked” than her smaller inspiration, said Berlingske’s debate editor, Aminata Corr Thrane. “On the other hand, she has bigger breasts, and that’s probably where the problem lies. Do naked female breasts have to have a specific academic shape and size to be allowed to appear in public?”

Euronews. “I simply think the argument that the statue should be ugly and pornographic is too primitive,” he told the broadcaster. “We shouldn’t be so afraid of a pair of breasts.”

Bech reportedly offered to donate the statue to the fort – but Helle Barth, chair of Dragør municipality’s climate, urban and business committee, told Berlingske: “It’s just hard to fit in. It takes up a lot of space.”

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