St.
Petersburg Arbitration Court on Monday postponed until April 12
issuing a ruling on a claim by City Hall's property committee, or
KUGI, against the Nabokov Museum for 5 years of unpaid rent.
"The court gave us time to try to reach an out-of-court
settlement with KUGI," Tatyana Ponomoryova, director of the museum,
said Wednesday.
The world's only museum dedicated to Vladimir Nabokov, one of the
20th century's greatest writers, was taken to court by KUGI in
January and told to pay rent arrears totaling $23,000 owed under an
agreement signed by the museum's management in 1998.
The agreement determined the rent at $500 month for the
345-square meter area occupied by the museum on the ground floor of
a building at 57 Bolshaya Morskaya, where Nabokov spent the first18
years of his life.
The museum has not been able to pay the rental from its own
funds. Its only income is from ticket sales and small private
donations.
"We hope that KUGI will consider restructuring the debt, let us
pay it in installments, or at least halve the debt," Ponomaryova
said. "Even then it will be hard for us."
No museum can operate purely from ticket sales, she said. Tickets
to the Nabokov museum cost 20 rubles ($0.70). The museum gets from
five to 100 visitors daily, depending on the season.
The best solution for the museum could be for the City Hall to
grant
the museum the status of a state-run
institution.
"The museum was bound to have such problems organized the way it
was," said Ponomaryova, who took over the museum in 2002.
Dmitry Nabokov, the writer's son who lives in the Switzerland
helped the museum by sending items that had belonged to Vladimir
Nabokov, some of which are displayed at the museum, she said.
As for a financial assistance, she said, Nabokov takes the
position that the house belonged to the family and was taken from
them illegally by the Soviets, so the government should look after
the financing of the museum.
He agreed to transfer to the museum money he receives as payments
for publishing rights, but Russian publishers consider copyright
does not apply to Nabokov's works because they were written before
1973, she said.
Even if royalties were paid, they would not be large amounts, she
added.
Before 1917 Nabokov's family occupied all three floors of the
building, A dining room, hall and library were located on the ground
floor, a living area for parents was on the first floor and
children's rooms were on the third floor.
While the young writer lived there the house was frequently
visited by famous figures, including singer Fyodor Chaliapin and
Sergei Kusevitsky, a conductor and pianist who gave the future
writer music lessons.
The first and second floors are currently occupied by Nevskoye
Vremya newspaper, while the ground floor is frequently visited by
those interested in exile Russian literature.