Austria refuses to return painting to Jewish family

Published March 7, 2015
Vienna: Visitors of the Secession Museum stand in a hall where the painting, Kiss to the Whole World (1902) by Austrian painter Gustav Klimt, is on display.—AFP
Vienna: Visitors of the Secession Museum stand in a hall where the painting, Kiss to the Whole World (1902) by Austrian painter Gustav Klimt, is on display.—AFP

VIENNA: A leading panel of experts on Friday recommended that Austria not return one of the country’s most treasured artworks to the descendants of its Jewish former owners robbed by the Nazis.

The Art Restitution Advisory Board “recommended unanimously ... not to return the ‘Beethoven Frieze’ by Gustav Klimt to the heirs of Erich Lederer, “panel chair Clemens Jabloner told journalists.

The fresco, 34 metres long, two metres high and weighing several tons, is widely regarded as a central masterpiece of Viennese “Jugendstil” art nouveau from the early 20th century.

The Nazis confiscated the 1902 work from the Jewish Lederer family in 1938.

After the end of World War II in 1945 Austria returned it to the family heir Erich Lederer, living in Switzerland, who then sold it to the Austrian Republic in 1972.

His descendants say however that Lederer sold it under pressure because Austria refused to allow him to take the frieze out of the country, and that the reported sale price of $750,000 was too low.

They launched a claim for its return in 2013.

Published in Dawn March 7th , 2015

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