​So that’s what happened to Hillary Clinton’s emails.

The 2016 Democratic presidential nominee sat behind a ​replica of the Oval Office’s Resolute Desk and thumbed through ​printed copies of her ​messages​ at an art exhibit in Venice.

“Found my emails at the Venice Biennale. Someone alert the House GOP​,” she ​cheekily tweeted on Thursday, including a photo of her behind the desk.

Kenneth Goldsmith, the artist behind the exhibit titled “HILLARY: The Hillary Clinton Emails,” tweeted out photos of her on Wednesday.

​”​Hillary Clinton spent an hour yesterday reading her emails at my exhibition of all 62,000 pages of them in Venice. She is pictured here at a replica of the Oval Office Resolute Desk, stacked with her emails,” he wrote on Twitter.

The curators of the show, Francesco Urbano Ragazzi, said the former secretary of state and US senator from New York arrived Tuesday morning for a private tour of the exhibit at the Venetian Teatro Italia.

“Clinton proceeded to sit down at an exact replica of the Oval Office’s Resolute Desk and leaf through her emails for nearly an hour,” the curators said in a statement.

Clinton told local media that despite the hubbub surrounding her emails during the 2016 presidential campaign, they still don’t amount to anything.

“It was and is still one of the strangest, most absurd events in American political history,” she said. “And anyone can go in and look at them — there’s nothing there.”

“It’s an artistic way of making the same point that I made in the book I wrote, ‘What Happened,’ ” Clinton continued. “And that is, there was nothing wrong, there was nothing that should have been so controversial.”

The FBI investigated Clinton’s use of a private email server at her New York home while she was secretary of state twice during the campaign and whether she kept classified information on it. ​

She sent or received about 62,000 emails during that time, and her lawyers turned over about half of them to the State Department.

The remainder, Clinton said, contained private information about her and her family.

Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, seized on the controversy during the campaign when crowds at his rallies chanted, “Lock her up.”

Clinton was never charged with any wrongdoing.

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