Read the text. Seven sentences have been removed from the text. There is one extra sentenceThe statue of Rocky outside the Philadelphia Museum of Art is very popular with tourists, who often stop to take their photo in front of it without bothering to visit the museum itself. пустоThis irritated Jessie Hemmons, so last month the 24-year-old artist knitted a bright pink jacket and put it on the statue of the boxer. She chose the colour because it attracts attention. On the front of the jacket, Jessie has knitted the words 'Go see the art'. пустоJessie hopes that her message will result in more people visiting the gallery. This form of street art has become known as 'yarn bombing'. The craze is believed to have started in 2005, when Magda Sayeg was working at Raye, her shop in Houston, Texas. One day she decided, just for fun, to knit a blue-and-pink cover for the shop's door handle. пустоShe believes that most street art is done by men and that yarn bombing is a more feminine activity. Pedestrians stopped on the pavement outside the is shop to photograph it, and even motorists slowed down to take a closer look. Their reaction inspired Magda to make covers for other objects in the street, such as a stop sign, a lamp post, a parking meter - and even an entire bus, which took a whole week to complete! пустоHer work has been shown in museums and galleries around the world. Photos of their creations kept appearing on blogs and social networking sites and the craze soon spread. There are now yarn bombing groups in dozens of countries and they have covered bus stops, bicycle racks, benches, phone boxes and even fountains! Like most types of street art, the works are temporary and begin to fall apart within a few weeks, so yarn bombers photograph and film their works and upload them to the internet, where everybody can see them.Some of the men who want to have their photos taken with Rocky are disappointed when they see the jacket, but Jessie is pleased that they react that way. пустоWhether you see yarn bombing as a bit of fun that brightens up the cities, or as a form of high culture with a serious message, it is a craze that is likely to continue. But not everyone approves of the new form of street art. Some people argue that if it is done without permission, then covering public objects in wool is vandalism and littering. That may be true in the eyes of the law, but the police appear to take a relatively relaxed attitude to yarn bombers. They might interrupt them if they see them at work in the street, but yarn bombers say the police are more likely to find their activities amusing than view them as criminal.However, yarn bombing has landed Polish artist Agata Oleksiak in serious trouble. Agata - or Olek, as she calls herself - has been an active artist since 2003, and has covered cars and diggers in wool, as well as a whole train in her native city of Lodz. пустоShe so claims that her message is a positive one and sees herself as a professional artist. But when Olek knitted covers and attached them to sculptures in an underwater museum near Cancun, the Mexican authorities were not very happy. Like Jessie Hemmons's jacket, Olek's covers had a political message: she wanted to draw attention to endangered species such as the whale shark. But the director of the museum claims that Olek may herself have harmed the marine life that grows on the sculptures. Olek is puzzled by the reaction. пустоShe decided to set up a group of knitters, which she 20 called 'Knitta Please'. She believes that her creations are as good as the paintings you see in the world's best art galleries, and if anyone calls her work 'yarn bombing', she gets quite upset.

К сожалению, у нас пока нет статистики ответов на данный вопрос, но мы работаем над этим.