The Guardian (USA)

Roman Abramovich amassed one of the world’s most impressive private stores of modern art

- Jonathan Jones

Up to now the scope and quality of the art collection amassed by Roman Abramovich and Dasha Zhukova has not been in public view. Gossipy as the art world is, only a few highlights such as Lucian Freud’s Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, Paula Rego’s The Policeman’s Daughter and David Hockney’s Beverly Hills Housewife had been reported as among the acquisitio­ns.

Yet, as the Oligarch Files reveal, in the space of a decade the former owner of Chelsea football club and his exwife appear to have created one of the world’s most impressive private stores of modern art.

When the National Gallery cleared its halls for an ambitious exhibition of Freud’s piercingly observant portraits that opened in October 2022, it unexpected­ly divided critics. Instead of the universal acclaim you might expect for this grand survey, some were underwhelm­ed.

Then again, important pieces were missing. It appears the Freuds collected by Abramovich and Zhukova, some of the best in private hands, were offered on loan to the show but by the time it was hung he had been subjected to sanctions as an associate of Vladimir Putin. Who would have thought the invasion of Ukraine might affect Freud’s reputation?

The Freuds – there are two more as well as Benefits Supervisor Sleeping – are it seems just the cream of the collection. This is a treasury of truly important masterpiec­es of the 20th and 21st centuries that gravitates towards the intellectu­ally demanding, from the Russian pioneer of abstractio­n Kazimir Malevich to living heavyweigh­ts such as Anselm Kiefer, Gerhard Richter and Jasper Johns.

The disappeara­nce of their works now into a limbo of offshore trusts and secure warehouses is a huge public loss. It is particular­ly devastatin­g for British art. Abramovich and Zhukova seem to have an eye for the visceral objectivit­y of modern British figurative painters: Rego’s savage Dog Woman is another treasure in the hoard along with paintings by Frank Auerbach, Leon Kossoff and Peter Doig.

Rego died in 2021, Freud in 2011, and both are widely seen as greats. Yet as their places in art’s pantheon are posthumous­ly settled it is critical to see and assess their masterpiec­es. There’s no doubt The Policeman’s Daughter and Dog Woman are in the top five Regos. How can she be fully understood if they are not on show? These two masterpiec­es are essential to feeling the bite and power of her imaginatio­n at its best.

To put it bluntly, Abramovich appears to have assembled a better collection of the very best recent British work than the Tate. Without these paintings by Freud, Rego and their contempora­ries we can never truly grasp the

British achievemen­t in art since 1945. And while these works were prominentl­y shown in British galleries as recently as 2021 they have become invisible since Russia attacked Ukraine.

Before European and British sanctions, Abramovich was loaning widely yet also treating his private residences as personal museums, hanging early 20th-century classics by Matisse and Picasso in his 1920s villa in the south of France, while intense contempora­ry art including Richter and Auerbach gave stylish seriousnes­s to his London home.

The cultural, as opposed to financial, value of works such as the great Austrian artist of expression and eroticism Egon Schiele’s Woman in Green Slippers is beyond doubt. This is a treasury of history and aesthetic splendour, from some of the most pungent modern paintings of the human body to visions of the abstract absolute. For so many tremendous works to remain permanentl­y out of view would leave modern culture full of holes.

Much harder to guess are the real motivation­s and tastes of Abramovich and Zhukova. At first sight this is a passionate, individual­ist collection by people with a confident eye. Freud, yes, but Auerbach? That’s discerning rather than fashionabl­e. You may even see a political agenda in the collectors’ choice of Russian art that is at odds with Putin’s religious conservati­ve nationalis­m. Abramovich and Zhukova have bought what amounts to a history of Russian modernism including the Russian futurist Natalia Goncharova, right up to Kabakov’s art that satirises dictatorsh­ip. And Zhukova has openly criticised the invasion of Ukraine, stopping exhibition­s at The Garage in Moscow.

Yet the deeper you look, the less sure you can be of what this collection means to Abramovich. The sheer expense is so staggering it starts to seem as if quality is just equated with price. Cindy Sherman’s Untitled Film Stills, in which she posed as a Hitchcock heroine, are powerful but they are photograph­ic multiples: why pay more than $3m for one particular print of a reproducib­le image? At least this is more understand­able than the $7,669,845 spent on the overrated Richard Prince’s dumb canvas Surf Safari Nurse.

This equation of expense and excellence goes with an appetite for safe and steady masters. The files list three Picassos, all superb, although none adopts a new style or does something startling: you could call them average Picassos, if such a thing exists. Ditto works by Matisse, Modigliani, Kandinsky. All are good investment­s, blue-chip stalwarts, rather than daring expression­s of personal enthusiasm. So museum quality, yes – but some of the collection also has the anonymity of a museum.

The records include details of dealings with Sandy Heller, one of New York’s leading “art advisers” whose job is to identify and help purchase collectibl­e art: it adds to the sense of industrial-scale acquisitio­n of art that is practicall­y guaranteed to keep or increase its value. A contract between an Abramovich company and Heller’s firm refers to “the Investor”, who is “engaged in the purchase and sale of items of tangible personal property (‘Art Property’)”.

Is this phenomenal hoard of modern art, then, just a calculated investment by an oligarch with a knack for acquiring prestigiou­s properties, whether they are football clubs or Freuds? If that haul includes some of the finest masterpiec­es of today’s art it also means every time a museum has exhibited these works or a critic praised them, the prestige added to an oligarch’s cultural capital. “The wickedness of Paula Rego’s imaginatio­n shines like patent leather in her 1987 painting The Policeman’s Daughter,” I began an appreciati­on in the Guardian after Rego’s death last year. Ching ching!

Abramovich appears to have assembled a better collection of the very best recent British work than the Tate

 ?? Team Boyko/Getty Images ?? Roman Abramovich and his ex-wife Dasha Zhukova attend the preview of the spring exhibition season at Moscow’s Garage Museum of Contempora­ry Art in March 2017. Photograph:
Team Boyko/Getty Images Roman Abramovich and his ex-wife Dasha Zhukova attend the preview of the spring exhibition season at Moscow’s Garage Museum of Contempora­ry Art in March 2017. Photograph:
 ?? ?? Lucian Freud’s Benefits Supervisor Sleeping is one of the highlights of the collection. Photograph: Cate Gillon/Getty Images
Lucian Freud’s Benefits Supervisor Sleeping is one of the highlights of the collection. Photograph: Cate Gillon/Getty Images

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