Russia's Hermitage museum calls for state support during COVID-19 lockdown
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Hermitage Museum is located in St. Petersburg, Russia. /VCG

Hermitage Museum is located in St. Petersburg, Russia. /VCG

The head of Russia's renowned Hermitage Museum said on Tuesday the government should ensure the survival of museums which are struggling during a coronavirus lockdown.

Since the introduction of a ban on gatherings of more than 50 people in mid-March, museums across Russia have gradually closed their doors to the public.

President Vladimir Putin then declared April a non-working month, encouraging Russians to stay home to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Hermitage chief Mikhail Piotrovsky said the museum had already lost half of its annual budget and was now in talks with the government in the hope to secure financial aid.

A view of Hermitage Museum, July 11, 2018. /VCG

A view of Hermitage Museum, July 11, 2018. /VCG

"The state must ensure the survival of culture," Piotrovsky said during an online news conference. The museum earned 2.5 billion rubles (32 million U.S. dollars) in 2018. 

Piotrovsky said that once the lockdown is over the museum would need about a month to prepare for a re-opening.

The museum was founded in 1764 under Empress Catherine the Great and features more than three million works of art and world culture artifacts. Nearly five million people visited the Hermitage last year.

Achilles the cat, that lives in St. Petersburg's Hermitage Museum, chooses Switzerland while attempting to predict the result of the match of the soccer World Cup between Sweden and Switzerland in St. Petersburg, Russia, July 3, 2018. /VCG

Achilles the cat, that lives in St. Petersburg's Hermitage Museum, chooses Switzerland while attempting to predict the result of the match of the soccer World Cup between Sweden and Switzerland in St. Petersburg, Russia, July 3, 2018. /VCG

Since the beginning of the lockdown, the museum has been organizing virtual tours which have become very popular with art lovers.

Piotrovsky said museum staff also kept feeding its "famous" cats that live there and hunt for mice and rats. Cats first found a home at the Hermitage long before it became a museum open to the public in the 1850s. They are now hugely popular with tourists who snap up souvenirs and postcards adorned with cat pictures on sale in the museum's shops.

Source(s): AFP