Kherson museum workers have identified another painting that was stolen by the Russian occupiers

Kherson museum workers have identified another painting that was stolen by the Russian occupiers

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Research staff of the Kherson Art Museum identified another painting from the collection – a painting by an unknown artist “Seascape”. The painting was stolen by the Russian military in November 2022. This was reported by the head of the information and mass department of the Kherson regional museum named after O. Shovkunenko, Larisa Zharkih, writes Suspilne. The canvas of the unknown artist “Seascape” (Near the coast of Greece) of 1907 was recognized in a photograph from the Central Museum of Taurida (Simferopol). The picture shows only a fragment of the painting, so the identification process took some time. “There were immediate assumptions, but in the photo the painting is located at an angle. And for some time there were doubts whether it was even there. Until they waited with graphic programs, deformed the visible piece and superimposed it on the photo of the original painting – everything coincided. In addition, the frame is the same as on the original,” said the scientific employee of the museum. Before the beginning of restoration work in the Kherson Museum, the painting “Seascape” was exhibited in the concert hall. At the beginning of November, the landscape was taken out and was photographed in the Simferopol Museum. It is not known where the picture is now. We will remind you that the collection of the Oleksiy Shevkunenko Kherson Art Museum included more than 13,000 works of art. Among the exhibits were the works of Ivan Aivazovsky, Oleksiy Shevkunenko, Mykola Pymonenko, August von Bayer, and the icons “Yurii the Snake Fighter with the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul”, “The Virgin Calm My Sorrows” and others. The fact that the Russian occupiers are taking away the collection of the Art Museum with trucks became known thanks to the people of Kherson. Later, the paintings from the Kherson Museum “lit up” in the Crimea, in the Simferopol Art Museum. Read also: “If it weren’t for the collaborators, we would have saved the museum from the Russians.” Interview with the director of the Kherson Art Museum

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