| ART Italians, Cleveland museum not quite in sync over agreement to return worksSaturday, May 10, 2008 Plain Dealer Art Critic Italy sent conflicting signals Friday about whether it had reached an agreement with the Cleveland Museum of Art over returning ancient works of art the country believes were looted. The Associated Press reported that the Italian Culture Ministry in Rome announced completion of an agreement with the museum under which 16 unspecified objects would be returned. But when contacted by The Plain Dealer, Maurizio Fiorilli, the lawyer handling the negotiations for Italy, at first said that there was no agreement yet and that the original AP report was "sbagliato" -- mistaken. He said the culture ministry's statement was only "an expression of hope" and "an expression of desire that the negotiations would conclude shortly." Hours later, in an interview with AP in Rome, Fiorilli said that Italy and the museum had reached a verbal agreement and that negotiations were almost at a final stage. He told the news service that Italy hopes to hear back soon from Cleveland on finalizing the deal. The museum, meanwhile, was taken by surprise. "No agreement has been reached, nor has the museum agreed to transfer any objects to Italy," the museum said in a statement Friday. Cindy Fink, the museum's director of marketing and communications, declined to comment on Fiorilli's description of a verbal agreement. The statements from Rome coincided with a change in leadership at the Ministry of Fine Arts. Conservative Sandro Bondi, appointed by newly elected Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, succeeded Francesco Rutelli as minister of culture. The Associated Press quoted Rutelli as having said: "I immediately gave some good news to the new minister. Just these past days we have concluded the agreement -- which will be formalized by Minister Bondi -- with the Cleveland museum." Rutelli described the objects to be returned as "significant," without elaborating. Speaking to The Plain Dealer, Fiorilli praised Cleveland museum director Timothy Rub for being "sensitive and open," and expressed the hope that an agreement could be reached within a couple of months. When Italy reaches an agreement with the Cleveland museum, "you can read it as a manifestation of cultural collaboration, not a defeat for Cleveland and a victory for Italy," he said. "It will be a victory for culture." To reach Steven Litt: slitt@plaind.com, 216-999-4136 Quote this article on your site
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