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Titian's Diana and Actaeon
Boost: Titian's Diana and Actaeon

Heritage fund gives its entire grant to protect masterpiece

Louise Jury, Chief Arts Correspondent
19 Nov 2008


THE campaign to save a Titian masterpiece was given a £10 million boost today.

The National Heritage Memorial Fund, set up as Britain's fund of last resort for saving treasures at risk, made the award to help stop the potential loss of the painting of Diana And Actaeon overseas.

In an indication of the importance of the work, the sum amounts to the fund's entire annual government grant.

The 7th Duke of Sutherland owns the 16th century painting which has been on public loan to the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh.

He now wants to sell and has offered it at a below-market price of £50million. The Scottish galleries have joined with the National Gallery in London to raise the funds.

The painting is at the National Gallery until 14 December. Artist Bridget Riley, 77, was today to become the latest to pay homage to the Titian, after Lucian Freud, Peter Blake, Paula Rego, Tracey Emin and Michael Craig-Martin joined in support. Jenny Abramsky, who recently took over as chairwoman of the heritage fund, said: "It was an extraordinary decision for us financially, but it's as important as ever to protect our cultural heritage."

The Titian, based on Ovid's Metamorphoses, is part of the Bridgewater Collection, which the duke has on loan. He has promised the rest can stay on public view for at least 21 years as long as Diana And Actaeon is purchased.

Ms Abramsky said the continued loan of what is the greatest private collection of Old Masters on loan to any public gallery in the world also contributed to the fund's decision.

Nicholas Penny, director of the National Gallery, said that the galleries were "enormously grateful".

The galleries, which would share the work, have until the end of the year to raise the remaining millions needed.

Reader views (3)

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Yes, R Pearce, why do we spend money on anything other than schools, hospitals and world poverty? A sustainable and laudable economic model...isn't it?

- Andy, surrey, 20/11/2008 10:14
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Why is my money paying for this? Schools are failing, NHS hospitals are still dirty and our troops are under provided with equipment and the governments spending £10m on a painting! This is ridiculous

- R Pearce, Buckinghamshire, 19/11/2008 19:38
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It was painted by an Italian for a Spanish king, given by him to the French, then sold to an English coal magnate. Why is it a National Treasure? It's a masterpiece but it has no special right to be here. The National Heritage Fund should be used to preserve items which are part of our own artistic heritage.

- Paul Freeman, London, England, 19/11/2008 15:55
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