This museum in a bleak outpost has one of the world´s greatest collections of avant-garde art, rescued from Stalin´s clutches by an electrician. But now it needs a rescue of its ownI am sitting at a huge table at the Ministry of Culture in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, as officials explain what sounds like a wonderful opportunity. There´s currently an international call-out to find someone to run a gallery in the country, one housing the world´s second-largest collection of Russian avant garde art. What an amazing job, I think - raising the profile of a museum that could turn out to be the Louvre of central Asia.But the dream job may not be quite so dreamy. The next day, at a godawful hour, I get up to fly to Nukus in northern Uzbekistan, where this `museum of forbidden art` is located. En route, I blearily note that even the guidebooks can find little to say about this `unappealing city`. It seems the only other reason people venture there is for a spot of `disaster tourism`. The Aral Sea, once the fourth largest inland sea, has shrunk because of Soviet irrigation systems and chemicals pumped into the water. All the fish are dead. There´s a horribly photogenic landscape of rusting boats on a dried-up seabed that looks like a lunar surface. Toxic dust blows through the area - there are high rates of infant mortality and cancer. Continue reading...
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