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French city Amiens asks Madonna for loan of lost painting

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The mayor of Amiens in northern France has released a video “requesting” that Madonna “loan” the city a painting from her personal collection, which resembles one lost there during World War I.

The 19th-century work, “Diane and Endymion” by artist Jerome-Martin Langlois, is “likely” the same one “loaned by the Louvre to the Fine Art Museum in Amiens before World War I and which subsequently disappeared”, Brigitte Foure said in a video message to the Queen of Pop posted on Facebook.

“Obviously, we don t dispute in any way the legal acquisition that you made of this work,” Foure added.

Instead she asked the singer for a “loan” to exhibit it in 2028, when Amiens hopes to be the year s European Capital of Culture.

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Lending the image would allow “the inhabitants to discover this work and enjoy it,” the mayor said.

The painting s possible provenance was suggested by newspaper Le Figaro in an investigation published this month.

Sold at auction for $1.3 million to Madonna in 1989, an art conservator spotted the monumental work in a photo of her home published in magazine Paris Match.

It represents a mythological scene of the bare-breasted goddess Diana approaching the shepherd Endymion.

“I m not certain that it s the actual painting”, but even if a copy, “it s extremely similar to the work” and “I d like the people of Amiens to be able to see it again,” Foure said.

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Langlois  original work was ordered in 1817 to decorate the royal Versailles palace outside Paris, said Francois Seguin, interim director of the Picardie Museum — formerly Amiens  Fine Art Museum.

It was loaned by Paris  Louvre Museum to the northern city from 1872, until being declared missing after World War I.

Madonna s painting “is almost certainly a copy, most likely by the artist himself”, the Louvre said when it exhibited the painting in 1988.

Her version lacks the artist s signature, the date of the work and his stamp, and is around 3 centimetres (one inch) smaller than the original, making it “not very likely” that it s the same work, expert Seguin said.

Nevertheless, “it s the only evidence of the work that was lost,” he added. 

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