MOSCOW, April 30 (RAPSI) – The Zamoskvoretsky District Court of Moscow has sentenced Igor Podporin, charged with damaging Ilya Repin’s painting “Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan 16 November 1581” at the Tretyakov Gallery, to 30 months in a penal colony, RAPSI reports from the courtroom on Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, he was found guilty of the crime.
On Monday, a prosecutor asked the court to imprison him for 3 years.
Also on Monday, the court dismissed a motion for yet another complex psychological and psychiatric examination of the defendant. The defense insisted that Podporin was mentally infirm when committing the crime. However, the court held that the results of an initial exam were enough to have understanding of the defendant's mental condition.
Podporin was charged with damaging or destructing most valuable objects of cultural heritage. In February, his detention was extended until August 14.
The incident took place on the evening of May 25, 2018, just five minutes before the museum’s closing, the Tretyakov Gallery’s press service said. The man ran into the empty hall of works by Repin and bashed the painting using a metal stanchion. Podporin broke through the glass encasing the well-known work of art depicting the horrified tsar and his dying son and ripped the canvas in multiple places, the statement read.
According to case papers, damage caused by Podporin is estimated at around 500,000 rubles (about $8,000); the restoration cost will range from 5 to 10 million rubles ($80,000 – 155,000).
The defendant pleaded guilty in court.