To get into the Potocki Palace, a gem of Ukrainian architecture, you have to show your ID, slip past the armed soldiers and duck under some scaffolding. 

All that, just to see some bare picture rails.

Life has resumed a semblance of quasi-normality in Lviv, western Ukraine, since Russian forces pulled out of the Kyiv region to focus their offensive on the south and east.

But museums in the self-styled capital of culture only dare open their doors a chink, convinced the invaders will pillage Ukraine’s culture as they have its villages.

Empty walls where pieces of art were previously hung in one of the galleries of the Potocki Palace. Photos: Yuriy Dyachyshyn/AFPEmpty walls where pieces of art were previously hung in one of the galleries of the Potocki Palace. Photos: Yuriy Dyachyshyn/AFP

“We’d like to open up a bit more but security is complicated,” explained Vassyl Mytsko, deputy director of the Lviv National Gallery. Ukraine’s largest fine arts museum has 21 sites, housing a vast collection of 65,000 works of art.

“How can we be sure the Russians aren’t just gathering their strength again so they can chuck all their rockets at us?”

The staff of the National were taken by surprise when Russia invaded on February 24. “We didn’t think the strikes would get this far” and threaten Lviv, Mytsko said.

An employee walks past a protectively wrapped display cases and furniture in one of the galleries of the Potocki Palace.An employee walks past a protectively wrapped display cases and furniture in one of the galleries of the Potocki Palace.

The museum curators were “stunned” at first but soon got to work wrapping up sculptures and paintings – some of which are worth millions – and squirreling them to safety in secret locations, where they remain to this day.

The Potocki, opened exclusively for AFP, is no exception. 

Workers are using the absence of its precious paintings to give the bare walls a coating of bright red paint following the removal of works including Georges de la Tour’s Payment of Taxes.

Since early May, two of the National’s other sites more than an hour away from Lviv have started reopening to the public. On occasions.

Georges de la Tour’s 'Payment of Taxes', one of the treasures. Photo: wikiartGeorges de la Tour’s 'Payment of Taxes', one of the treasures. Photo: wikiart

There is no question, however, of the museums in the city itself unlocking their doors “until there is major change – politically or on the ground”, Mytsko said.

Kremlin troops have already bombed a museum near Kyiv dedicated to artist Maria Primachenko and another in Kharkiv about philosopher Grigori Skovoroda, so they remain a threat to Lviv, he said, adding: “They want to destroy Ukraine’s identity and its European roots.”

‘Skillful’

Roman Shmelik, head of the Lviv History Museum, is just as suspicious.

The museum’s collection is spread across ten buildings, some dating back to the 16th Century, but only two opened on May 1 – one to let people use its cafe, the other for a children’s exhibition. The buildings were otherwise empty, their treasures under wraps elsewhere.

Shuddering, Shmelik recalled how the Soviets had taken control of Lviv in the Second World War and turned the museum into a “propaganda tool”.

People walk past the Lviv National Art Gallery with windows protected by sandbags.People walk past the Lviv National Art Gallery with windows protected by sandbags.

“They took out the permanent exhibition and replaced it with one glorifying the Red Army,” he spluttered, still indignant.

Right across the country, the Soviets “acted like bulldozers”, concurred Mykola Bevz, a professor of architecture at Lviv University who was instrumental in obtaining UNESCO heritage status for his city.

Lviv, with its 3,000 monuments, was nonetheless better able than other cities to fend off Soviet “urban planning”, he opined.

Firstly, because the “cradle of Ukrainian patriotism” only belatedly fell into Soviet hands – the east of Ukraine became part of the USSR in 1918 – and secondly, because “there was an intellectual movement that mounted a skillful resistance”.

In addition, the citizens of Lviv succeeded in saving a historic part of the city that was to be razed to make way for a huge square for military parades, Bevz added.

One of the empty galleries of the Potocki Palace.One of the empty galleries of the Potocki Palace.

Mytsko said his predecessor at the National, Boris Voznitsky, had, by skillful ruses, succeeded in enriching the museum’s collections of religious works, despite the official Soviet policy of atheism.

Shmelik, who identifies with these defenders of Ukrainian heritage, stressed the importance of protecting Lviv’s museums “to contribute to the formation of our national identity”.

His response to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s assertion that there is no such thing as Ukrainian identity because Russians and Ukrainians are the same people?

“We’re Ukrainian and we have nothing to prove,” he sniffed.

 

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