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In the Woods by Ivan Shishkin 15.12.2011, 16:42

Russian art: real or fake?

Russian art sells like hotcakes at auctions across the world, but sometimes they turn out to be... inedible. A Luxembourg firm has recently filed suit against the New York-based Russian art gallery claiming some of its works were fake and overpriced.

Authenticity of Modigliani's Marevna (1919) questioned, while the painting hangs at Pushkin Museum in Moscow 11.11.2011, 13:11 1 comment

­Fake Modigliani?

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A Bogatyr by Viktor Vasnetsov 16.11.2011, 17:00

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Russian art wanted by Interpol

Published: 29 December, 2011, 15:14

The Road by Isaak Levitan tracked down by Interpol

The Road by Isaak Levitan tracked down by Interpol

TAGS: Art, Crime, Russia


Russian art rakes in millions at auctions the world over, but items can turn out to be illegally exported or stolen. Right now, Interpol is searching for nearly a thousand rare objects of art that have gone missing in Russia in the last two decades.

­Moscow hopes to track down the lost treasures with the help of the world’s largest international police organization, Interpol.

In the past two decades, 250 works have been returned to Russia, including sought-after canvases by leading landscape artist Isaak Levitan, Russia’s deputy Interior Minister says.

Historical artifacts such as official decrees signed by Catherine the Great and Tsars Nicholas I and Nicholas II, stolen from the Russian State Archive, are also among the key relics recently brought home.

Interpol has a system for circulating information in the form of a database accessible not only to law enforcement agencies, but also to members of the public with access rights. Users can go through the list of most recently stolen works of art, as well as view recovered works.

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russiaart December 31, 2011, 14:21
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considering that there is no rule of law in Russia, any claim made to Interpol regarding russian art should be highly suspect.  The United States Department of Homeland Security has already determined that Russian Government officials with Rosokhrankultura made false claims to the US government regarding allegedly illegally exported paintings.  The whole thing was actually an extortion scam against the lawful owner who had extensive ownership documentation dating back to the days of the Soviet Union.  When the claim was further investigated it turned out that Rosokhrankultura had absolutely no documentation whatsoever supporting their claims.  Rosokhrankultura has also been determined to have made other fraudulent claims against paintings offered at American Auction houses which were not supported by any documentation at all.