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Klimt portrait, missing for 22 years, to star in Rome show

FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020 file photo, an Italian Policeman, left, and a Carabiniere, paramilitary police officer, stand beside a painting which was found last December near an art gallery and believed to be the missing Gustav Klimt's painting 'Portrait of a Lady' during a press conference in Piacenza, Italy. Gustav Klimt's "Portrait of a Lady," which was missing for nearly 23 years after its theft from an Italian museum, will be a star in an exhibit about the artist that is opening this month at a Rome museum. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni) (Antonio Calanni, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

ROME – Gustav Klimt’s “Portrait of a Lady,” which went missing for nearly 23 years after its theft from an Italian museum, will star in an exhibit about the Austrian artist that is opening this month at a Rome museum.

Art experts announced in January 2020 that a painting discovered hidden inside a Piacenza art gallery’s outer walls was the Klimt portrait that had been stolen in 1997 from the Ricci Oddi Modern Art Gallery in that northern city.

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The work, along with other Klimt paintings, sculptures and drawings, will feature in an exhibit opening on Oct. 27 and running for five months at the Museum of Rome in Palazzo Braschi, organizers said Friday. The painting then will go on display in Piacenza in April in another exhibition.

In December 2019, a gardener at the Piacenza gallery was clearing away ivy when he noticed a small panel door in a wall and opened it. Behind, he found a plastic bag containing what was later authenticated as the stolen Klimt.

The painting depicts a young woman sensually glancing over her shoulder against a dreamy, moss green background. Klimt completed the portrait in 1917, a year before he died, and the Ricci Oddi Gallery acquired it in 1925.

How, why and just when the portrait wound up stashed behind a gallery wall has been a mystery. It's unclear if it ever left the gallery grounds. One theory holds that whoever stole it might have hidden it there waiting for the news of the sensational theft to quiet down, but for some reason never retrieved it.

Organizers of the Rome exhibit say the show will explore, among other aspects, the artist's relationship with Italy and the influence he had on other artists working in the country.


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