MOSCOW (REUTERS).- Two leading Russian art curators found guilty of extremism for an exhibition that angered Orthodox Christians said on Tuesday they would take their case to the European Court of Human Rights. Moscow’s Tagansky court on Monday imposed fines of around $6,500 and $4,900 on Yuri Samodurov and Andrei Yerofeyev for their 2007 Forbidden Art exhibition, which mixed religious icons with sexual and pop-culture images. Among the exhibits were works depicting an Orthodox icon adorned with Mickey Mouse, a Russian general raping a soldier, and a Soviet-era Order of Lenin medal over Christ’s head. The court found the men had shown criminal intent in organizing the exhibition. “We have launched