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SHTUKIN'S HEIR ASKS FOR SEIZURE OF MAJOR MATISSE WORK
01 June 2000


Cet article se compose de 2 pages.
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The heir of Serguei Shtukin, a famous Russian art lover whose collection was seized by Soviet authorities in 1918, has been waging a battle against Russia in an effort to recover at least a major work by Henri Matisse, «The Dance», exhibited in Rome from December 22nd 1999 until June 11th 2000.

Serguei Shtukin (1854-1936) was probably the greatest collector of modern paintings at the turn of the 20th Century. This industrialist notably went in 1893 to Paris, where his brother Ivan had befriended many artists, including Degas, Renoir and Redon.

Ivan Shtukin eventually committed suicide on learning that his Greco paintings were fakes. His brother Serguei started to buy works by Forain, Spanish artist Zuloaga, Monet (13 paintings), Cézanne, 16 paintings by Gauguin, others by Degas and Derain, 51 works from Picasso and 38 from Matisse to whom he had been introduced by the dealer Ambroise Vollard.

Serguei Shtukin asked Matisse to produce two monumental works for his house in Moscow, «The Dance» and «The Music». At first the collector refused to have nudes as he considered these as shocking but eventually changed his mind a month later after finding Matisse's work utterly beautiful. In 1918 his collection was confiscated by the new Soviet authorities and was shared by the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg and the Pushkin Museum in Moscow.

Shtukin, who died in Paris after he fled the Soviet Union, was considered to have gathered the most complete collection of modern paintings in the world well before some great American collectors such as Dr Barnes.

André-Marc Delocque-Fourcaud, Shtshukin's grand-son, is now trying to recover the collection or at least some important pieces as it had been confiscated without any indemnity in return. According present laws in democratic countries, they are considered as stolen.

Irina Shtukin, his mother, already wrote to President Eltsin in 1993 to suggest a negotiation between the Russian government and her family since Russia was no longer under a communist rule. She indicated that in the absence of a positive sign from the Russian government she would seize justice in any democratic country where works of the collection would be shown.

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