Museum offers gold toilet to Trump instead of Van Gogh's work - report
- Published

New York's Guggenheim museum has turned down a request from President Donald Trump to borrow Van Gogh's work for the White House - instead offering him a gold toilet, media reports say.
The museum apologised for not being able to furnish the White House with Van Gogh's Landscape With Snow, the Washington Post says.
But the Guggenheim suggested a "solid, 18-karat toilet" could be offered as an alternative.
The White House has made no comment.
According to the Washington Post, museum curator Nancy Spector responded to the White House request last September.
"I am sorry... to inform you that we are unable to participate in this loan since the painting is part of the museum's Thannhauser Collection, which is prohibited from travel except for the rarest of occasions," she wrote in an email.
The 1888 Van Gogh painting, the email added, would be exhibited at the museum's sister institution with the permission of the owners.
However, the curator added that the gold toilet created by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan was available to the White House "for a long-term loan".
"It is, of course, extremely valuable and somewhat fragile, but we would provide all the instructions for its installation and care," Ms Spector added.
The fully functional exhibit - titled America - is seen as a pointed satire on excessive wealth in the US.
This is truly the ultimate metaphor for Trump's America. Everybody should donate to the Guggenheim. lol
— The Black Pill Resists (@SirGregorResist) January 25, 2018
You spend your life hoping one day you’ll get the chance to respond to an unreasonable request in a manner worthy of Oscar Wilde. For this one Guggenheim curator, that moment came last September and, as the kids say, she didn’t throw away her shot. https://t.co/AtT13KTRjR
— aderson francois 🇭🇹 (@abfrancois) January 25, 2018
Trump asked The Guggenheim to borrow a Van Gogh, instead they offered him a golden toilet.
— Kaivan Shroff (@KaivanShroff) January 26, 2018
Guess that’s what happens when the first thing you do as president is gut the National Endowment for the Arts. pic.twitter.com/LR7QBzAewR
But not everyone agreed with the Guggenheim's approach:
@Guggenheim Thank you for allowing #NancySpector insult our @POTUS by offering him a #GoldenToilet. Please don't be expecting my yearly donation this 2018. Seeing as I voted for @realDonaldTrump I'm assuming my donations aren't wanted anymore.
— AdoraDeplorableKat (@MrsKHuie) January 25, 2018
It is common for US presidents and first ladies to borrow major art works to decorate the various rooms at the White House.