A man has admitted defacing a Mark Rothko painting at
London's Tate Modern gallery.
Wlodzimierz
Umaniec, 26, pleaded guilty to criminal damage to property valued at over £5,000
at Camberwell Green Magistrates' Court.
Umaniec, a
Polish national from Victoria Road in Worthing, West Sussex, also known as
Vladimir Umanets, was released on conditional bail.
He will be
sentenced at Inner London Crown Court at a later date.
'Tens of millions'
Umaniec was
released on bail on condition he lives and sleeps at his address, his passport
is retained, and that he does not go to the Tate Modern.
He must also
report to his local police station three times a week.
Witnesses saw a
man daub the Rothko mural, Black on Maroon, on 7 October before fleeing the
gallery.
The gallery
said it did not have a price for the defaced piece, which is a 1958 Seagram
mural, but paintings by the Russian-born artist often fetch tens of millions of
pounds.
Earlier this
year, Rothko's Orange, Red, Yellow sold for £53.8m in New York - the highest
price paid for a piece of post-war art at auction.
Source: BBC
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