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Stolen $66 Million Painting Found in Museum Wall Is Authentic

Municipal officials announced the painting by Austrian symbolist artist Gustav Klimt, created between 1916-1917, is authentic.

Stolen $66 Million Painting Found in Museum Wall Is Authentic
The Klimt work “Portrait of a Lady”. (Source: Official website of Ricci Oddi Museum). 

(Bloomberg) -- The mystery surrounding a $66 million painting deepened last month after it resurfaced in the walls of an Italian gallery nearly 23 years after it was reported stolen.

Municipal officials announced on Friday that the painting by Austrian symbolist artist Gustav Klimt, created between 1916-1917, is authentic.

Stolen $66 Million Painting Found in Museum Wall Is Authentic

Gardeners at the Ricci Oddi Gallery of Modern Art in northern Italy’s Piacenza province discovered Klimt’s “Portrait of a Lady” in a bag within a wall while they were clearing ivy, the New York Times said.

ABC News reported last month that the painting was believed to have been stolen in 1997 while it was being moved into another building. Suspicion surrounding its disappearance resurfaced in 2016 when a trace of DNA was found on its frame, which investigators discovered on the roof.

On Friday, it was declared authentic by experts following technical testing of the work, municipal mayor Patrizia Barbier said in a statement.

“It is news of historical importance for the artistic and cultural community and for the city of Piacenza,” she said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Philip J. Heijmans in Singapore at pheijmans1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shamim Adam at sadam2@bloomberg.net, Siraj Datoo

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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