Lazar: Action over Munkacsy “not too sportsmanlike” but in national interest

Budapest (MTI) – Whereas it was “not the most sportsmanlike” to decree that Munkacsy’s Golgota privately owned painting should be placed on a national list of protected artwork that cannot be taken out of the country, doing so was in the national interest, the government office chief said on Thursday.
Related article:
Janos Lazar told a regular government news conference that museum professionals were in complete agreement that the painting owned by Imre Pakh, who has lent the prized work to a museum in the city of Debrecen, should be protected to ensure that it stays in Hungary. Many years will pass before a judgement on the matter is reached in international courts, he said.

“We would have preferred to have convinced Mr Pakh, with this friendly step, that it is in any event worthwhile coming to an agreement with the Hungarian state,” Lazar said, adding that “we will not allow ourselves to be blackmailed.” The Hungarian state will not accept paying over the international odds for the work, he declared.

The cabinet office recently initiated a procedure to prevent Mihaly Munkacsy’s monumental painting from being permanently removed from the country.

“With the listing procedure, the government wants to keep this extraordinary work of our national painting in the Hungarian sphere of interest,” the national office in charge of oversight of cultural heritage said. “Naturally, the procedure will not prevent the owner of the painting from selling it, as its listing has no such purpose.”

The painting will be listed temporarily until rules on a permanent listing are applied, it added.

The Hungarian-born American collector he would have “Golgotha” removed from the Deri Museum in Debrecen because talks on the possible sale of the work to the state have fallen through.

The painting is one of eminent 19th-century painter Munkacsy’s famous “Christ Trilogy” and is currently on loan to the Deri Museum, where all three paintings are on display.

The state has owned “Ecce Homo!” for decades and it recently acquired “Christ Before Pilate”, another of the three, from Canada’s Art Gallery of Hamilton for 5.7 million dollars, with funding from the National Bank of Hungary’s programme to buy national art treasures.

Ferenc Gerhardt, deputy governor of the central bank, said on public television earlier that the bank would pay 6 million dollars to acquire the painting, though Pakh is asking for 9 million dollars. Pakh said in the statement on Sunday that the painting would be removed on June 25. He noted that Christie’s, Sotheby’s and Fine Art Asset Management, had appraised the painting and they had all estimated its value around 10 million dollars.

Photo: MTI

Source: http://mtva.hu/hu/hungary-matters