Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Russian gallery: Guard added eyes to avant-garde work

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MOSCOW — A Russian gallery says one of its security guards has vandalized an avantgarde painting on loan from the country’s top art repository by drawing eyes on the picture’s deliberate­ly featureles­s faces. It said the damage can be repaired.

The Yeltsin Center in Ekaterinbu­rg said the vandalism of the painting “Three Figures” by Anna Leporskaya occurred Dec. 7. It said the suspected culprit worked for a private company providing security at the gallery.

The painting, dating from the 1930s, shows three torsos and heads with hair but no facial features; the vandal drew eyes on two of them with a ballpoint pen. The Yeltsin Center said the painting has been sent for restoratio­n to the State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, which owns it.

The Russian news site RBK said a criminal case has been opened on charges that carry a sentence of up to three months in prison. The picture had been reportedly insured for 74.9 million rubles (roughly $1 million).

Leporskaya, who lived from 1900-1982, was a student of Kazimir Malevich, a seminal Russian abstract artist best known for his 1915 work “Black Square.”

 ?? THE ART NEWSPAPER RUSSIA VIA AP ?? A portion of the painting “Three Figures” by Anna Leporskaya is shown after the act of vandalism occurred last Dec. 7 at The Yeltsin Center in Yekaterinb­urg, Russia.
THE ART NEWSPAPER RUSSIA VIA AP A portion of the painting “Three Figures” by Anna Leporskaya is shown after the act of vandalism occurred last Dec. 7 at The Yeltsin Center in Yekaterinb­urg, Russia.

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