See the Art From Protests Against Netanyahu’s Visit to Congress

Original signage and larger-than-life puppets filled the streets as thousands marched to denounce the Israeli prime minister’s attacks on Gaza.

See the Art From Protests Against Netanyahu’s Visit to Congress
Activists hold up a puppet of a bloody-handed Netanyahu during protests in Washington, DC on July 24, 2024 (all photos Murat Cem Mengüç/Hyperallergic unless otherwise noted)

WASHINGTON, DC — In protest of Benjamin Netanyahu’s address to the United States Congress today, Wednesday, July 24, thousands of activists flooded the streets in massive rallies against the Israeli leader’s ongoing attacks on Gaza. Demonstrators calling for Netanyahu’s arrest and the end of US aid to Israel were able to bring parts of the city to a halt despite heavy police presence and hundreds detained.

Beginning at Pennsylvania Avenue and 3rd Street, outside the National Gallery of Art, activists paraded larger-than-life puppets of a bloody-handed Netanyahu and President Joe Biden. As the prime minister began his speech, protesters headed toward Congress, leaving behind effigies of coffins with Palestinian flags along Massachusetts Avenue. A theatrical staging by the local activist group Code Pink invited people to “arrest” an actor wearing a Netanyahu mask and dressed like a cartoon inmate, and some demonstrators burned effigies and photographs of the politician. 

Artistic expression met the anger and frustration felt in Capitol Hill today as the death toll in Gaza tops 39,000 and Israel continues its assault on the Khan Younis area nine months after Hamas's October 7 attack. See photographs of the most creative interventions across the march below.


Some protesters carried paper poppies, a popular symbol of Palestine.
Groups including Artists Against Apartheid set up effigies of coffins with Palestinian flags along Massachusetts Avenue.
A massive effigy of Biden features devil horns and blood dripping from his mouth created by the NoMüNoMü art center in Baltimore
Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) holds a sign that reads "Guilty of Genocide" as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses a joint meeting of Congress in the chamber of the House of Representatives on July 24, 2024. (photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
The local activist group Code Pink invited people to “arrest” an actor wearing a Netanyahu mask.
Protesters burned effigies of Netanyahu outside of Union Station. (photo by Michael A. McCoy/Getty Images)
Activists paraded hand-painted signs, flags, and puppets.
An effigy of a coffin with a Palestinian flag can be seen outside the National Gallery of Art, where the march began.
A poster protesting Netanyahu's visit reads "Lock him up."
The local Code Pink activist group marches with an oversized banner.