Muscat Daily

Nazi-looted work from pensioner’s trove returned

-

Berlin, Germany - Germany said on Wednesday it had returned to its rightful owners the last artwork confirmed as looted by the Nazis uncovered in the collection of a reclusive Munich pensioner.

Culture Minister Monika Gruetters said a total of 14 pieces had been handed back since a giant trove held by Cornelius Gurlitt, the son of a Nazi-era art dealer, came to light eight years ago.

The final work to be restituted was ‘ Klavierspi­el’ (Playing the Piano), a drawing by German artist Carl Spitzweg. It was given on Tuesday to Christie’s auction house according to the wishes of the heirs of music publisher Henri Hinrichsen, who was murdered at Auschwitz in 1942.

The transfer was arranged with the Museum of Fine Arts in Bern, which inherited Gurlitt's collection when he died in 2014.

Gruetters said it sent ‘an important message’ that with the Spitzweg drawing ‘all art identified as looted from the Gurlitt art trove has been returned to the heirs of the victims’.

“Behind every one of these pictures is a tragic human fate,” Gruetters said.

“We cannot make up for that great suffering. But by reckoning with the art looted by the Nazis, we are trying to contribute to historical justice and face up to our moral responsibi­lity.”

‘Enduring duty’

Gruetters pledged to ‘decisively’ continue provenance research on work in German collection­s, saying it was an ‘enduring duty’.

Adolf Hitler’s regime stole the drawing from Hinrichsen in 1939 and the following year Hildebrand Gurlitt bought it.

The Nazis had engaged Hildebrand - who was part-Jewish - from 1938 to deal in items taken from Jewish owners or confiscate­d as ‘degenerate’.

A German government task force identified the drawing as looted in 2015 but legal complicati­ons meant its restitutio­n could not be settled until now, Gruetters said.

A total of 14 pieces had been handed back since a giant trove held by Cornelius Gurlitt, the son of an art dealer, came to light

MONIKA GRUETTERS

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows a visitor reading the informatio­n on the exhibition Gurlitt: Status Report, Nazi Art Theft and
its Consequenc­es at the Bundeskuns­thalle in Bonn, western Germany on November 2, 2017
(AFP) This file photo shows a visitor reading the informatio­n on the exhibition Gurlitt: Status Report, Nazi Art Theft and its Consequenc­es at the Bundeskuns­thalle in Bonn, western Germany on November 2, 2017
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman