To celebrate the Fourth of July, a wooden sculpture of First Lady Melania Trump was set on fire in her hometown of Sevnica, Slovenia.

In a report from Reuters, Brad Downey, the Berlin-based American artist who had commissioned the sculpture to a local artist Ales “Maxi” Zupevc, immediately reported the “blackened” and “disfigured” wooden sculpture to Slovenian authorities.

The sculpture was carved out of a standing linden tree using a chainsaw. The result wasa 9-feet high statue that resembled a block, rather than a graceful depiction of Melania. However, it is instantly recognizable by the powder blue Ralph Lauren dress that Melania wore to the 2017 inauguration. As the Washington Post described the artwork, “Its eyes are bulging ovals beneath a near unibrow, its nose a pudgy blob. Save for its powder-blue Inauguration Day garb, it looks little like the first lady.”

Downey told Reuters that he wanted to know the person that is responsible for setting the sculpture ablaze. Bizarrely, the artist wanted to interview the perpetrator for his upcoming documentary about the sculpture which was set to be released in September. Entitled “Melania,” the film chronicles Max as a craftsman and a woodworker and celebrates his ability to create a wooden statue of the first lady.

Throughout the process, Max reflects on Melania’s life as she moved out of Slovenia to live the ultimate American dream. After it was finished, the sculpture received a massive backlash on the local media. One local resident defended the first lady, telling ABC News that “She is our beauty, no matter what, even here. She looks like she just walked out of a beautiful naive painting.”

During the time that the sculpture was erected, people were confused about whether Downey sees the sculpture as a prank or a celebration of the first lady. Art-curator Lukas Feireiss asked, “Is it serious? Is it a joke?” Feireiss explained that even art experts can’t seem to figure out what the sculpture was meant for. However, the curator added that it is the same thing that makes it powerful.

In January, President Donald Trump’s statue was also burned to the ground in Moravce, Slovenia. Inspired by Melanie’s block sculpture, the 26 feet high statue faces two sides, one featured a “nice” Trump, while another side depicted him as a “vampire.”

While Trump’s statue became a tourist attraction, the locals were not that happy, and even threatened to burn it down on Halloween.

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