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The Price of Inheritance
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CIMABUE (Cenni di
Pepo) Florence c. 1240 - c. 1302 Pisa
The Madonna and
Child Enthroned with Two Angels
The last Cimabue owned by an individual - Now owned by the Nation
Report by Rachel Le Goff
IN A LAST MINUTE COUP - London's National Gallery have gained a masterpiece for the nation. The NG could never have offered to purchase the painting from the heirs of Sir John Gooch outright - given their measly annual budget of under £1.8 million for new acquisitions. Instead, Neil MacGregor, the inspired Director of the NG and resident expert Dr. Dillian Gordon lobbied the government to agree to a swap - the Cimabue would stay in the UK and go to the National collection for the public to enjoy if a substantial sum would be deducted from the inheritance tax bill that was strangling the Gooch family. The painting had
been entered in a Sotheby's sale scheduled for 6th July 2000 in London
with the family hoping to raise money enough to cover their death tax bill.
The only trouble was, as Mr MacGregor clearly foresaw - that in such
cases the national treasure is usually knocked down to a foreign bidder,
packed up and shipped to a distant country. In the past, when a work
of art is deemed of irreplaceable importance like the Cimabue or
Canova's 'Three Graces' now in the V & A Museum, the government are
cajoled by desperate curators and gallery directors into either raising
money for a pre-auction purchase or accepting the work of art in lieu of
taxes.
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