The statue, unearthed at a Roman villa in 1781, was returned to Italy in 1948 as part of works illegally obtained by the Nazis.
teft
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171Y

Does anyone have their own art?

frog 🐸
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41Y

My experience is that smaller art galleries tend to have art from local artists, rather than pieces stolen from other countries. As an art student last year, I did two day trips to a nearby town that was an artist colony (prior to tourism and the housing crisis forcing out everyone but the wealthy) and while the largest gallery had some national and international works on display, they also prominently featured local artists, and the small galleries were 100% local.

Support your local art galleries, folks. The art is more ethically obtained (either purchased or loaned from the creator, not stolen), and you’re helping artists from your own community. Plus you get to see some amazing art from creators who aren’t famous enough for a big museum to pay attention to.

I visited The Met recently, and I’m reasonably sure Washington Crossing the Delaware originated in the US.

It’s actually German, lmao, though the artist grew up in America.

FIash Mob #5678
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1Y

Oh, wow.

I was not aware of that, but appreciate the info. If you ever see the real thing it has the most grotesque, masturbatory Trumpist American gilded frame.

I didn’t know that of the top of my head, I just vaguely remembered something about it and WW2, so I google the painting.

Strangely enough, that’s how I’ve always imagined it.

@floofloof@lemmy.ca
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31Y

Yeah, when I was standing in front of it it occurred to me that this was one of the most vulgarly nationalistic things I’ve ever seen.

If you google for “brazillian paintings” the first and more recognizable painting is exposed on an argentinean private museum.

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11Y

🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

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MILAN — Italy’s culture minister is refusing a request by the German State Antiquities Collection in Munich to return an ancient Roman statue that embodied Hitler’s Aryan aesthetic, calling it a national treasure.

The statue, unearthed at a Roman villa in 1781, was returned to Italy in 1948 as part of works illegally obtained by the Nazis.

The dispute arose when the director of the National Roman Museum requested the statue’s 17th-century marble base be returned from the Antikensammlungen state antiquities collection.

The German museum instead asked for the return of the Discobolus Palombara, saying it had been illegally transported to Italy in 1948, the Corriere della Sera newspaper reported Friday.

“I made a joke — they’ll have to step over my dead body,’’ the minister told Italian Rai state TV on Saturday evening.

“This work was obtained fraudulently by the Nazis, and it’s part of our national heritage,’’ Sangiuliano told Rai.


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