Film helps lost Hungarian painting come home

Published November 28, 2014
Budapest: A visitor takes a look at the painting  ‘Sleeping woman with black vase’ by Hungarian artist Robert Bereny in the Virag Judit Art Gallery on Thursday.—AFP
Budapest: A visitor takes a look at the painting ‘Sleeping woman with black vase’ by Hungarian artist Robert Bereny in the Virag Judit Art Gallery on Thursday.—AFP

BUDAPEST: A long-lost avant-garde painting has returned home to Hungary after nine decades thanks to a sharp-eyed art historian who spotted it being used as a prop in the Hollywood film, “Stuart Little”.

In 2009 Gergely Barki, a researcher at Hungary’s National Gallery, noticed “Sleeping Lady with Black Vase” by Robert Bereny (1888-1953) in the 1999 children’s movie about a mouse as he watched TV with his daughter Lola.

“I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw Bereny’s long-lost masterpiece on the wall behind Hugh Laurie, I nearly dropped Lola from my lap,” Barki, 43, said on Thursday.

“A researcher can never take his eyes off the job, even when watching Christmas movies at home,” he said.

The painting disappeared in the 1920s, but Barki recognised it immediately even though he had only seen a faded black-and-white photo dating from a 1928 exhibition archived in the National Gallery.

Barki sent a flurry of emails to staff at the film’s makers Sony Pictures and Columbia Pictures, receiving a reply from a former Sony employee, a set designer -- two years later.

“She said the picture was hanging on her wall,” Barki recalled.

“She had snapped it up for next-to-nothing in an antiques shop in Pasadena, California, thinking its avant-garde elegance was perfect for Stuart Little’s living room.

“After leaving Sony the set-designer sold the painting to a private collector who has now brought the picture to Budapest for auction.”

Bereny, the leader of a pre-World War I avant-garde movement called the “Group of Eights”, fled to Berlin in 1920 after designing recruitment posters for Hungary’s short-lived communist revolution in 1919.

In the German capital, he had a romance with actress Marlene Dietrich, and, according to Barki, a rumoured fling with Anastasia, the mysterious daughter of Russia’s last tsar Nicholas II.

Published in Dawn, November 28th, 2014

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