The Borneo Post

The art of shedding light on gifts with possible Nazi ties

- By Ben Simon

BERN, Switzerlan­d: When Georges F. Keller began donating paintings by masters like Henri Matisse and Salvador Dali to the Kunstmuseu­m in Bern his reputation was not in doubt.

The Swiss-Brazilian national had been a respected art dealer who gifted 116 works to the museum from the 1950s until his death in 1981. But last year, the Kunstmuseu­m’s provenance researcher came across an archival document linking Keller to Etienne Bignou, a Frenchman now considered a “red-flag” dealer because he traded art with Germans in Nazi- occupied Paris.

For the Bern museum, the potential fallout of gifts with possible Nazi ties was not new.

The museum was the sole heir of hundreds of major pieces left behind by Cornelius Gurlitt, who died in 2014 and whose father, Hildebrand, was tasked by the Nazis with selling art stolen from Jews or confiscate­d as “degenerate” works.

The case captured huge global attention and the arduous process of trying to restore the Gurlitt treasures to their rightful owners is ongoing.

But there are signs that the Gurlitt ordeal, with the heavy legal and historical responsibi­lity accompanyi­ng the artworks, has changed attitudes across Switzerlan­d about an institutio­n’s duty concerning suspect art.

“I clearly see a before and after the Gurlitt case,” Kunstmuseu­m director Nina Zimmer told AFP.

“The climate has changed, the tone has changed, the questions have changed and I think we all agree that it is part of the museum’s task to look at where the collection­s come from and to deliver answers,” she said.

Keller and Bignou worked together in Paris at the Gallerie Georges Petit, which specialise­d in Impression­ist works, until it closed in 1933, according to archives published by the Frick Art Reference Library.

Bignou then set up his own eponymous gallery in the French capital with Keller, who also had French nationalit­y, as his partner.

Keller later became the director of the New York branch of the Bignou gallery, the archives show.

Amelie Ebbinghaus, a provenance researcher at the firm Art Loss Register, said that documents from both the French state and the Allied powers indicate that Bignou traded with German buyers in Paris and was identified at the time as a “collaborat­or.”

“That obviously doesn’t mean that the works came from problemati­c sources, but it can’t be ruled out,” she said.

It is not clear what Bignou’s potentiall­y dubious connection­s mean for the works Keller gave to the Kunstmuseu­m, including Matisse’s “The Blue Blouse” (1936), which depicts a young woman in bold, primary colours.

Zimmer told AFP that she had her own questions about Keller before the Bignou connection was establishe­d, since none of his donations to various Swiss museums had come with documentat­ion.

“I was always curious,” she said. “We have almost zero knowledge of where these works came from before he gave them to us.” But once the KellerBign­ou link was confirmed, it was “immediatel­y clear that we need to know more about these works,” she said.

The Bern museum has applied for federal funding to conduct a full audit of Keller’s legacy.

That approach -- and new Swiss government grants for provenance research -- point to changing practices in a country with a mixed record on Nazilooted art.

“Switzerlan­d had the position that it was a neutral, free country and that any trade that happened in Switzerlan­d in the period of 1933 to 1945 was not affected by the Nazis,” Ebbinghaus said.

But that view was not necessaril­y shared by other countries, who pointed to artworks sold in Switzerlan­d at cut-rate prices by Jews fleeing the Nazis, she said.

In the late 1990s, Switzerlan­d and others came under pressure to probe their World War II- era history, not only in looted art but also bank accounts and gold deposits.

A 1998 landmark internatio­nal agreement on returning art stolen by the Nazis known as the Washington Declaratio­n was drawn up.

The question of what constitute­s looted art, as well as research suggesting that possibly thousands of works held in Switzerlan­d were sold by Jews under threat, continue to provoke debate.

However, Swiss museums and auction houses are increasing­ly showing caution in handling problemati­c pieces, Ebbinghaus told AFP. Establishi­ng ownership of a looted piece, let alone identifyin­g a rightful heir, is notoriousl­y tricky.

This has been highlighte­d in prominent cases such as the battle between an American descendant of Jewish Holocaust victims and Austria’s Belvedere Museum over masterpiec­es by Gustav Klimt which featured in the 2015 film “Woman in Gold” starring Helen Mirren.

Zimmer said the challenges for Switzerlan­d were a lack of qualified provenance researcher­s and limited funding. But she identified private archives as a roadblock that threatens all provenance investigat­ions.

“Sometimes you make great progress and then you find out that the exact next document you need is in a family archive and you need to convince them to open it for you,” she said.

And that can be quite a tall order, she added. She stressed that the Bern museum would continue to push for more provenance research by building ties with universiti­es and creating programmes to cultivate a new generation of specialist­s.

“We need to dive deeper in there, and we will,” she said. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Kunstmuseu­m Bern director Nina Zimmer poses next to a painting by Henri Matisse entitled “The Blue Blouse” in Bern.• (Above) A painting by Edgar Degas entitled: “Before the race” .
— AFP photos Kunstmuseu­m Bern director Nina Zimmer poses next to a painting by Henri Matisse entitled “The Blue Blouse” in Bern.• (Above) A painting by Edgar Degas entitled: “Before the race” .

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