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Last week, a visitor at Yayoi Kusama’s “Infinity Mirrors” exhibition at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, DC, allegedly destroyed one of its famed acrylic pumpkins after trying to take a selfie, according to a museumgoer and first reported on art blog Artnet.

Though a museum spokesperson couldn’t confirm that the damaged gourd was caused by a personal photo, the part of the exhibit containing the polka-dotted pumpkins was temporarily closed.

But this is just one of many incidents. Here are four more mishaps in which selfies ruined recreation, leisure and travel:

Portugal

In 2016, two statues were destroyed in Lisbon: a 126-year-old statue of Portuguese ruler Dom Sebastiao, at a train station, and an 18th-century statue of St. Michael at the National Museum of Ancient Art.

Italy

In 2015, tourists broke the circa-1700-era Hercules statue at Loggia dei Militi palace in Cremona. In Milan, a student climbed onto a 19th-century statue depicting a “Drunken Satyr” at the Academy of Fine Arts of Brera for a selfie and broke the artwork.

Croatia

Reps from UNESCO expressed concern in July over selfie-taking tourists at Croatia’s Plitvice Lakes National Park. “Visitors are roaming beyond them to get away from the crowds and get nice photos,” Katarina Poljak, a park guardian, told Croatian media. Officials say this has damaged some trails and construction sites.

Germany

In 2014, an American wanted a photo inside a vagina statue at Tübingen University’s Interfaculty Institute of Microbiology in Germany. While the sculpture was not harmed, it took 22 firefighters to free the dope.

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