MOSCOW, October 17 - RAPSI. On Tuesday the Moscow City Court revised the Presnensky District Court’s ruling on the division of assets between ex-Senator Vladimir Slutsker and his former wife Olga Slutsker, the court told the Russian Legal Information Agency (RAPSI/rapsinews.com).

The court has partially upheld Olga Slutsker’s appeal, which contested the division of their art collection.

“The ruling is hard to grasp by just hearing it. We can only come to proper conclusions when we see it written in full. However, there is one thing I can say for sure – the court has heeded Olga’s arguments and has changed the ruling,” her lawyer Sergei Popov told RAPSI.

Olga Slutsker has been trying to get possession of the whole $30 million art collection. It includes both modern Western art, such as works by Andy Warhol and Damien Hirst, and paintings by Russian classic artists Karl Bryullov and Boris Kustodiev. Alexander Gofstein also representing Olga previously told RAPSI that the court awarded the most significant and well-known works by Western artists to her husband.

In particular, the ex-senator was awarded two apartments in Moscow, a house in the Moscow Region, two cars, a portion of their shares and works of art including Ming Dynasty terracotta figurines, Warhol’s Campbell's Soup, Kustodiev’s Winter Landscape, Bryullov’s Portrait of a Woman, as well as other paintings, drawings and photos.

Olga Slutsker will own apartments on Strastnoy Boulevard and Spasonalivkovsky Pereulok in Moscow, an apartment in St. Petersburg, two cars, shares, Warhol’s Nine Multicolored Marilyns and Four Mona Lisas, 11 of his children’s book illustrations, and several other artworks.