The teenager charged with throwing a 6-year-old boy from the 10th floor of London’s Tate Modern art gallery is being named publicly for the first time after turning 18 on Wednesday.

Jonty Bravery is charged with attempted murder in the 100-foot plunge that left the young French tourist with severe head injuries, as well as fractures to his back, arms and legs, according to reports.

Court restrictions that initially barred the London resident from being identified were lifted Wednesday, the day of his 18th birthday, making him no longer protected as a minor, the Times noted.

Bravery fought to have his anonymity extended, but the application was rejected after a 90-minute hearing Tuesday at London’s top court, the Old Bailey.

The teen is due in court next month for a plea hearing.

The injuries to the victim, whose identity is still protected by court order, initially were considered life-threatening following the attack at the tourist hotspot.

He is now “making progress bravely,” according to an update his family reportedly shared with a GoFundMe page that has raised more than $122,000.

“Our little boy doesn’t know anymore how to speak, to eat or to move his body but he begins to do his best to move his tongue, his right arm and hand,” they wrote in an update Sunday.

“We believe with all our heart that he will find the way, from his head, to do everything again. He is very brave. He keeps on smiling and reacting to our jokes.”