NV,' ''Ss:'::,. • '-. ...'S,N ,:::;NN.' . • , ,,• .S.,, `N‘;. ' ''','''ks. ..:.•..,:. ' '. '... '''' • N. ','''.. N ■ ' ' '''N.'• ‘`.`''': Ik.- ' ''.....:...,,, -.....; -.. ,...,,, ,,.,,, '."' ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSOCIATE EDITOR e Of Mystery The painting of an unidentified rabbi finds its way to Detroit. painting and estimated its worth at between $6,000 and $8,000. This story actually begins more than 150 years ago, with the birth of a boy named _Alexander. He was the third son of an immigrant from Bologna, Italy; both older brothers, Eduard and Paul, also would become artists. Alexander was born Jan. 23, 1836 in Riga, where his shoe- maker Italian father, once a soldier for Napoleon, had The mysterious settled the painting. family after being a pris- oner of war in Russia. Alexander's first teacher was his brother, Paul, who was 13 years his senior. Then in 1852 Alexander was enrolled at the St. Petersburg Academy of Fine Arts. Five years later, he won his first medal for sketches for a painting called The Inn. Soon after, Alexander began traveling, first to Spain and Belgium. Later, he would make journeys through Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania where, for reasons unknown, he painted scenes of Jewishcom- munities. One of the works he showed at an 1864 exhibit was Sermon in a Jewish Synagogue. Rizzoni, who was a member of the Imperial Academy of Arts, spent much of his life in Russia, but he was said to have loved his father's homeland best of all. He would settle in Italy in 1878; until then, he made frequent trips there and, as in the Baltics, painted many scenes from Jewish life. Among Rizzoni's Jewish works were Smoking Jew, Synagogue in Finland, Synagogue in Rome, T HE D ETRO I T J E WIS H NEWS - 14 bout one year ago, an acquain- tance approached Serguei Viches. He had an unusual request. Mr. Viches, who came here from the former Soviet Union in 1989, is known throughout the Russian community as someone who can get things done, like helping immigrants find a job. But he had never heard anything quite like this. The acquaintance, William, wanted Mr. Viches to sell a painting. The painting, its edges cracked and dry from aging, shows an unidentified rabbi and is signed by a well-known Russian artist, Alexander Rizzoni. William said the piece had been in his family for years. Mr. Viches agreed to sell the work. Meanwhile, though, William has disappeared, and Mr. Viches says he has no idea where he is or when he will return. What is certain is that the work he left behind is valuable. Sotheby's has examined the Reading of Talmud, A FareWell in Synagogue in Riga and Jewish Smugglers. (Some suggested that Rizzoni himself may have been Jewish, though this was never proven.) By the 1870s, Rizzoni had be- come so well-known that he no longer needed to exhibit his works to make money. He was living in Rome and regularly sent paintings back to Moscow, where they were sold to private collec- tors. His clients were leading figures in Russia, including mem- bers of the imperial family. Today, Rizzoni's works can be found at the State Gallery of Riga, the Russian Museum in William, meanwhile, has disappeared. St. Petersburg and Moscow's Tretyakov Gallery. Rizzoni died April 29, 1902 in Rome. Mr. Viches says he has no in- formation on how the painting may have come to William's fam- ily, though he notes that both the artist, Rizzoni, and William were natives of Riga. Mr. Viches is keeping the painting at a bank until he can find a buyer. He plans to save money from the sale for William or members of his family. Mr. Viches also hopes to iden- tify the figure in the painting, whom William told him was a prominent rabbi, probably from Vilna, of the 19th century. Anyone who can identify the rabbi in the portrait, or who wishes more information about the painting, should contact Serguei Viches, (810) 642-9292.