The exhibition will include
paintings by Van Dyck, Rubens and Rembrandt
An exhibition of art masterpieces lost to the UK for
234 years has opened at a stately home in Norfolk.
The collection
was owned by Britain's first Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole, but was sold to
Russia to pay off debts and to save the family home.
Now it is back
at Houghton Hall, Walpole's family home, after The Hermitage in St Petersburg
agreed to its loan.
The exhibition,
Houghton Revisited, is open until the end of September.
More than 70
pieces, including works by Van Dyck and Rembrandt, have been hung in their
original positions and will be surrounded by the original furniture, bronzes
and marble antiquities.
It took a year
to broker the deal to bring the paintings home to Norfolk.
Each painting
made the 2,736 km (1,700 miles) journey from Russia in a wooden crate, arriving
at Houghton Hall at the beginning of the month.
When they
arrived, curator of the exhibition Thierry More said: "We're so used to
seeing art works in galleries and museums [that] we forget those works of art
were meant to be admired and to be cherished in the environment of people's homes."
Source: BBC
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