Arts

    State Russian Museum staff decry damage to antique picture frames

    Thousands of antique frames are stored in the basement of the State Russian Museum in St Petersburg, but are officially classified as near-worthless "supplies" rather than museum objects

    Staff at the State Russian Museum in St Petersburg are raising the alarm that thousands of antique picture frames in storage are at risk from mould and mismanagement.

    Forty-five staff members have signed a letter warning the museums director, Vladimir Gusev, of the urgent need to preserve the frames, which was published by the St Petersburg magazine Gorod 812 in April. “Many of the frames are never displayed, since they are in a critical condition due to extremely poor storage conditions,” according to the staff appeal, resulting in the “destruction of the works and the emergence of mould on them”.

    The curator Oksana Lysenko tells The Art Newspaper that museum management began classifying picture frames as near-worthless “supplies” rather than artistic objects in 2018. Only 1,500 frames are expected to be re-listed in a fresh inventory, she says, among more than 8,000 identified in a museum ledger dating back to the 1950s.

    Lysenko says that the decision to downgrade tsarist-era frames to the status of supplies—worth one ruble each—means they can be stored “in any condition, literally like mops”. Furthermore, the museum does not have to report missing frames to the Russian culture ministry since they have been assigned such little monetary value and have not been recorded in the national digital registry of museum objects. Lysenko estimates that 800 frames are entirely missing. “When I tell my colleagues about this, they ask, how is this possible in the Russian Museum?”

    Around 3,000 frames remain in the basement of the Mikhailovsky Palace, the museums main building, according to Lysenko. Some were moved to better facilities in preparation for a controversial refurbishment of the palace, but Lysenko says the process has now virtually ground to a halt. (The construction project was cancelled by a court ruling in June 2019 but that was subsequently overturned by another court this June.) Photographs of the basement, seen by The Art Newspaper, show elaborate but damaged frames propped on the floor or crammed together on shelves.

    On 2 July, museum management posted a lengthy rebuttal on the Russian Museum's website, shifting blame to Lysenko and stating that the basement storage is due for modernisation in 2021-22. Two staff members wrote in the statement that they are withdrawing their signatures from the letter to Gusev. Lysenko, in a response published by Gorod 812 on 15 July, compared the museums denunciation to a Soviet-style meeting.

    Photographs provided to The Art Newspaper show some historic frames are propped on the floor of the museum's basement

    Museum management had allowed Olaf Lemke, a fraRead More – Source

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