Current:Home > StocksTradeEdge-Artwork believed stolen during Holocaust seized from museums in multiple states -FinanceMind
TradeEdge-Artwork believed stolen during Holocaust seized from museums in multiple states
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 17:04:00
Three artworks believed stolen during the Holocaust from a Jewish art collector and TradeEdgeentertainer have been seized from museums in three different states by New York law enforcement authorities.
The artworks by Austrian Expressionist Egon Schiele were all previously owned by Fritz Grünbaum, a cabaret performer and songwriter who died at the Dachau concentration camp in 1941.
The art was seized Wednesday from the Art Institute of Chicago, the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh and the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College in Ohio.
Warrants issued by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office say there's reasonable cause to believe the three artworks are stolen property.
The three works and several others from the collection, which Grünbaum began assembling in the 1920s, are already the subject of civil litigation on behalf of his heirs. They believe the entertainer was forced to cede ownership of his artworks under duress.
The son of a Jewish art dealer in what was then Moravia, Grünbaum studied law but began performing in cabarets in Vienna in 1906.
A well-known performer in Vienna and Berlin by the time Adolf Hitler rose to power, Grünbaum challenged the Nazi authorities in his work. He once quipped from a darkened stage, "I can't see a thing, not a single thing; I must have stumbled into National Socialist culture."
Grünbaum was arrested and sent to Dachau in 1938. He gave his final performance for fellow inmates on New Year's Eve 1940 while gravely ill, then died on Jan. 14, 1941.
The three pieces seized by Bragg's office are: "Russian War Prisoner," a watercolor and pencil on paper piece valued at $1.25 million, which was seized from the Art Institute; "Portrait of a Man," a pencil on paper drawing valued at $1 million and seized from the Carnegie Museum of Art; and "Girl With Black Hair," a watercolor and pencil on paper work valued at $1.5 million and taken from Oberlin.
The Art Institute said in a statement Thursday, "We are confident in our legal acquisition and lawful possession of this work. The piece is the subject of civil litigation in federal court, where this dispute is being properly litigated and where we are also defending our legal ownership."
The Carnegie Museum said it was committed to "acting in accordance with ethical, legal, and professional requirements and norms" and would cooperate with the authorities.
A request for comment was sent to the Oberlin museum.
Before the warrants were issued Wednesday, the Grünbaum heirs had filed civil claims against the three museums and several other defendants seeking the return of artworks that they say were looted from Grünbaum.
They won a victory in 2018 when a New York judge ruled that two works by Schiele had to be turned over to Grünbaum's heirs under the Holocaust Expropriated Recovery Act, passed by Congress in 2016.
In that case, the attorney for London art dealer of Richard Nagy said Nagy was the rightful owner of the works because Grünbaum's sister-in-law, Mathilde Lukacs, had sold them after his death.
But Judge Charles Ramos ruled that there was no evidence that Grünbaum had voluntarily transferred the artworks to Lukacs. "A signature at gunpoint cannot lead to a valid conveyance," he wrote.
Raymond Dowd, the attorney for the heirs in their civil proceedings, referred questions about the seizure of the three works on Wednesday to the district attorney's office.
The actions taken by the Bragg's office follow the seizures of what investigators said were looted antiquities from museums in Cleveland and Worcester, Massachusetts.
Manhattan prosecutors believe they have jurisdiction in all of the cases because the artworks were bought and sold by Manhattan art dealers at some point.
Douglas Cohen, a spokesperson for the district attorney, said he could not comment on the artworks seized except to say that they are part of an ongoing investigation.
- In:
- Lawsuit
- Art Institute Of Chicago
- New York
veryGood! (5624)
Related
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- In-N-Out Burger bans employees in 5 states from wearing masks
- As Flooding Increases, Chicago Looks To Make Basement Housing Safer
- Texas Environmentalists Look to EPA for Action on Methane, Saying State Agencies Have ‘Failed Us’
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Colleen Ballinger's Remaining Miranda Sings Tour Dates Canceled Amid Controversy
- Amazon Prime Day 2023 Samsonite Deals: Save Up to 62% On Luggage Just in Time for Summer Travel
- Sea Level Rise Could Drive 1 in 10 People from Their Homes, with Dangerous Implications for International Peace, UN Secretary General Warns
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- A punishing heat wave hits the West and Southwest U.S.
Ranking
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Summer School 2: Competition and the cheaper sneaker
- Amid Drought, Wealthy Homeowners in New Mexico are Getting a Tax Break to Water Their Lawns
- 2022 Will Be Remembered as the Year the U.S. Became the World’s Largest Exporter of Liquified Natural Gas
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Why Emily Blunt Is Taking a Year Off From Acting
- Kevin Costner Ordered in Divorce Docs to Pay Estranged Wife Christine $129K Per Month in Child Support
- Summer School 2: Competition and the cheaper sneaker
Recommendation
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
A lesson in Barbie labor economics
Residents Fear New Methane Contamination as Pennsylvania Lifts Its Gas-Drilling Ban in the Township of Dimock
Why Emily Blunt Is Taking a Year Off From Acting
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Zayn Malik Reveals the Real Reason He Left One Direction
Study: Higher Concentrations Of Arsenic, Uranium In Drinking Water In Black, Latino, Indigenous Communities
Behavioral Scientists’ Appeal To Climate Researchers: Study The Bias