Russia demands the return of works of art loaned to Milan
War and isolation have moved into the sphere of culture it seems after news came out that the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg (Russia) had demanded the return of several works of art that had been loaned for exhibitions in Italy, chiefly in Milan. The deadline given by the Russian museum was set as the end of March in what seems to be a response to sanctions imposed by the Italian government and cultural authorities at the start of the war.
Is a new Iron Curtain descending over the world of art and culture?
The exhibition Grand Tour: Dream of Italy from Venice to Pompeii, running at the Gallerie d'Italia, in Milan, until 27 March, was organised in collaboration with the Hermitage and contains several pieces from the Russian museum including Canova's Winged Cupid. Palazzo Reale, in the same city, is currently hosting an exhibition dedicated to the Venetian master Titian, which includes Young Woman with Feather Hat that the Hermitage now wants to be returned.

Titian's Portrait of a Young Woman in a Hat (c.1536), Source: Wikimedia Commons
The show in Milan is scheduled to go until June. The Hermitage Museum is also seeking the return of a Picasso from the Fondazione Alda Fendi in Rome.
Picasso's Young Woman, which was painted in 1909 and had never before been on show in Italy, was due to stay on display in Rome until 15 May.
"According to the decision of the Russian Ministry of Culture, all outstanding loans must be returned from abroad to Russia" and "the Hermitage is a state museum that depends on the ministry of culture." This was the explanation given by the director of the Russian museum, Mikhail Piotrovsky, in a letter sent to the director of the Palazzo Reale, as quoted by Wanted in Rome. Read More…