Zoo penguins check out art at locked-down museum (and it turns out they prefer Caravaggio to Monet) 

Culture vultures! Zoo penguins check out the art at a locked-down museum (and it turns out they prefer Caravaggio to Monet)

  • Three Humboldt penguins visited the empty Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art 
  • The Kansas City Zoo birds missed seeing visitors and were taken on a day out
  • The birds were said to prefer Italian artiest Caravaggio to the Frenchman Monet 

Three penguins get a break from the zoo and take a trip to an art museum in Kansas City in this adorable video.

The trio of Humboldt penguins (Spheniscus humboldti) are given the freedom to wander around the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City.

The birds from Kansas City Zoo waddle around the exhibits together enjoying the freedom of the empty hallways and exhibition rooms.

Three penguins from Kansas City Zoo waddle around and explore the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art while the crowds are kept away by the coronavirus lockdown

The coronavirus lockdown means that both the art museum and zoo have been left without visitors which offered the perfect opportunity for the penguins to go on a field trip.

The video, posted by the Nelson-Atkins Museum on May 14, has been viewed nearly 70,000 times.

It had the caption ‘Quarantine has caused everyone to go a little stir crazy, even the residents of the Kansas City Zoo. So several of the penguins decided to go on a field trip to the Nelson-Atkins, which is still closed, to get a little culture’ alongside it.

Executive director and CEO of Kansas City Zoo Randy Wisthoff said: ‘Taking care of wild animals at Kansas City Zoo we are always looking for ways to enrich their lives and stimulate their day and during this shutdown period really missed having visitors come up to see them.

The trio of birds observe the works of French impressionist Monet but prefer paintings done by the Italian Caravaggio

The trio of birds observe the works of French impressionist Monet but prefer paintings done by the Italian Caravaggio

The Humboldt penguins are listed as a vulnerable species with over-fishing, climate change and ocean acidification partly blamed

The Humboldt penguins are listed as a vulnerable species with over-fishing, climate change and ocean acidification partly blamed

‘We were happy to visit and the penguins absolutely loved it.’

The Executive Director and CEO of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Julian Zugazagoitia said that the penguins preferred the work of Italian painter Caravaggio than that of French impressionist Monet during their visit. 

Zugazagoitia said that he was seeing how the penguins reacted to art.

He even spoke Spanish to the penguins as the birds are native to Peru and Chile.

These aren’t the first penguins to be given the freedom to explore during the coronavirus lockdown.

Executive Director and CEO of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Julian Zugazagoitia (pictured) said he spoke to the birds in Spanish because they are native to Peru and Chile

Executive Director and CEO of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Julian Zugazagoitia (pictured) said he spoke to the birds in Spanish because they are native to Peru and Chile

At Singapore Zoo a dozen penguins were allowed to wander around the area near their enclosure, including the children’s play area. 

An obstacle course was also set up for the birds in Singapore to help strengthen their leg muscles.

The Humboldt penguins are native to the coastal areas of the South American countries and are listed as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

They have a lifespan of around 20 years and the base of their beaks is distinctively pink.

Over-fishing, climate change and ocean acidification have been blamed in part for the reduced population of the birds.