This morning (26 July), the Manhattan District Legal professional’s Workplace hosted what Matthew Bogdanos, chief of its Antiquities Trafficking Unit, known as a “celebration”—returning a Nazi-looted Egon Schiele drawing to heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, an Austrian Jewish cabaret performer and artwork collector who was murdered at Dachau in 1941.
“As a boss, you’re not purported to have a favorite,” Bogdanos mentioned on the restitution ceremony, “however there are some instances and a few days the place the tragedies had been so nice and the fun so actual, that it’s a idiot’s errand to faux that it’s simply one other day on the workplace. And that is a type of days.”
The drawing, Seated Nude Girl (1918), was made lower than yr earlier than Schiele’s demise and is believed to depict his spouse, Edith. It had been within the possession of the Papanek household, Austrian Jews who had efficiently fled the Nazis in 1938 and acquired the work many years later with none information of its historical past. After rising suspicious of its provenance lately, the Papaneks particularly sought out Grünbaum’s heirs as a way to “do the suitable factor” and return the work.
Members of the Grünbaum and Papanek households had been current on the ceremony. “Each of those households have been deeply impacted by the Holocaust,” District Legal professional Alvin L. Bragg mentioned through the occasion. “It’s notably shifting for me to be right here alongside them.”
Seated Nude Girl was bought in Manhattan by Helene and Ernst Papanek and given to their son, Gustav, in 1969. It was after Gustav’s demise in 2022 that his family members started their analysis into the drawing’s provenance.
Talking on behalf of the Papaneks, Gustav’s son-in-law Rocco Orlando known as the entire ordeal a “bittersweet irony of two households with a historical past of nice hurt and struggling due to the Holocaust. Helene and Ernst Papanek, who acquired this drawing, did so to attach themselves to their Viennese roots, to the roots of Austrian Expressionism.” He added that Ernst had been a “outstanding socialist reformer”, who through the Second World Struggle helped Jewish kids flee Austria and Germany.
Seated Nude Girl is one in every of greater than 80 Schiele works taken from Grünbaum and his household by the Nazis. As a result of Schiele’s artwork was deemed “degenerate” by the regime, the items had been offered overseas and the proceeds used to fund the battle. Most of Grünbaum’s Schieles ultimately discovered their solution to Galerie St. Etienne in New York Metropolis. The gallery’s founder, Otto Kallir, personally offered Seated Nude Girl to the Papaneks for $4,000 in 1961, in keeping with Tom Mashberg in The New York Instances.
The drawing will now head to Christie’s. The Grünbaum inheritor Paul Reif famous on the ceremony that, like with different works returned to the household, proceeds from the sale would go to the Grünbaum Fischer Basis “to help younger, splendidly gifted and underprivileged performing artists”.
Marc Porter, chairman and head of restitution at Christie’s, mentioned in a press release: “Christie’s is thrilled to play its half within the rising legacy of Fritz Grünbaum and his heirs. Right now, one other murals that belonged to Fritz is rightfully restituted to his household, and because the public sale home with the most important restitution division on the earth, Christie’s appears ahead to providing this piece within the close to future.” (Christie’s has offered a lot of different Schieles restituted to the Grünbaum heirs through the years.)
This marks the Manhattan DA’s third restitution ceremony and eleventh work returned to the Grünbaum household. Since September 2023 alone, 5 US museums and 4 personal collections have returned works to the household. Grünbaum’s is now the most important Holocaust art-restitution case within the US. A spat between the Manhattan DA’s Workplace and the Artwork Institute of Chicago over the rightful possession of a Schiele drawing of a battle prisoner as soon as belonging to Grünbaum is slowly making its solution to courtroom.
Since its inception in 2017, the Antiquities Trafficking Unit has held 93 repatriation and restitution ceremonies and recovered greater than 5,500 works price greater than $450m to 35 international locations and people. The unit has additionally convicted 16 individuals of cultural-property trafficking and filed extraditions for six others.