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Meanwhile, the Museum of Russian Icons in Clinton, Mass., was forced to shutter its only major show of the year after the Russian government in March called back 37 lent objects. "It's all such a nightmare," said Kent Russell, the curator of the museum, which had already spent about $300,000 promoting the show when it had to be closed. "We had a lot riding on this. We had a lot of tours that had to be cancelled. The catalog is of absolutely no value to us whatsoever." The Met recently said it was negotiating an agreement to show its exhibit of clothing designer Paul Poiret at the Kremlin Museum in Moscow this fall. "But if the embargo continues, the museum may reconsider," said Met spokeswoman Elyse Topalian. Legal experts and art professionals find it implausible that Russian cultural property lent to U.S. institutions could be seized. Howard Spiegler, an attorney with the International Art Law Group at Herrick, Feinstein, a New York-based firm, said exhibitions that are imported from abroad, as long as they are certified by the U.S. State Department, are protected from seizure. "What bothers me about this is that Russia is disingenuously trying to place blame on the plaintiffs in the Chabad case for Russia's alleged inability to loan artworks for the good of the American public," Spiegler said.
Greg Guroff, the president of the Bethesda, Md.-based Foundation for International Arts & Education, was a cultural attache to the Soviet Union and has advised both the Chabad and Russian Federation. He said the Russians' fear that their cultural property will be seized was unfounded. "It's so farfetched, it's hard for us to believe. They send artwork to other countries that have much less protection. Why exactly this fervor, no one can quite figure out," he said. Phone messages and emails sent to officials at the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., seeking comment for this story were not returned. The Schneerson Collection is comprised of two distinct sets: the "Library," which was seized by Russia's Bolshevik government during the October Revolution of 1917; and the "Archive," which scholars say was "twice plundered" because it was looted by the Nazis in 1939 and then taken by the Red Army to the Soviet Union in 1945 as "trophy" documents. Gerber, the movement's lawyer, said the Russian government has repatriated Nazi-looted property taken by the Soviet military to a number of countries, including France, Belgium and the Netherlands, but has stubbornly refused to return the collection. Other documents taken by Soviet trophy brigades from the Nazis that could help to reconstruct how Jews lived before and during the Holocaust have not been returned, as demonstrated by the newly published English-language guide to collections at the Russian State Military Archive, "Nazi-Looted Jewish Archives in Moscow." The book, which includes a description of the Schneerson texts captured during World War II, was published in association with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Jewish Theological Seminary, with funding for the research coming from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Wesley Fisher, the research director at the Claims Conference, said the collections, some of the most important archives of their kind in the world, were believed to have been destroyed for decades until they were found secreted away in the former Soviet Union. These are some of the last prisoners who have not gone home," he said.
Cristian Salazar can be followed at http://www.twitter.com/crsalazar.
Randy Herschaft can be followed at http://www.twitter.com/HerschaftAP.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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