The Citizen (KZN)

A long-lost Klimt resurfaces and will be auctioned

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A late painting by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt has resurfaced in a private collection and will be sold in April, Viennese auction house Kinsky has said.

Bildnis Fraeulein Lieser (Portrait of Miss Lieser) was commission­ed by a wealthy Jewish industrial­ist’s family and painted by Klimt in 1917 shortly before he died.

The well-preserved painting, which shows a dark-haired woman, was presented to the public in Vienna for the first time in January. It is due to be auctioned off on 24 April on behalf of its Austrian owners and the legal successors of the Lieser family on the basis of an agreement in accordance with the Washington Principles.

That 1998 internatio­nal agreement set out the procedure for returning art stolen by the Nazis. The work was last seen at a Viennese exhibition in 1925, documented by a black-and-white photo cited as the only previous proof of its existence.

The photo identifies the painting’s last owner as a member of the Lieser family, who lived at Vienna’s “Argentinie­rstrasse 20”. Henriette Lieser, who had remained in Vienna despite the Nazi rule, was deported in 1942 and murdered in Auschwitz the following year.

The unfinished portrait re-emerged when the current owner sought legal advice from lawyer and art law expert Ernst Ploil before inheriting it.

Despite extensive research, it remained unclear how the current owner’s family, who possessed the artwork since the 1960s, obtained it, said Ploil. “We have a gap between 1925 and the 1960s,” he said.

But he stressed that they had found no evidence that the work had been looted, stolen or unlawfully seized before or during the Second World War. The back of the painting is “completely untouched” and has “no stamps, no stickers, nothing”, he said.

“There are no indication­s of any illegal confiscati­on during the Nazi era, that is the usual stamps from the Gestapo or a shipping house where looted art was stored.”

No claims have yet been made by the Lieser descendant­s, but some of them have travelled to Vienna to see the painting.

Klimt portraits rarely come on to the open market. The Kinsky auction house estimates its value at €30 to €50 million (about R610 million to R1 billion), but considerin­g recent Klimt auctions, higher sums are conceivabl­e.

Last June, Klimt’s Dame mit Faecher (Lady with a Fan) was sold in London for £74 million, setting a new European art auction record. The previous record for an artwork sold in Europe was for Alberto Giacometti’s Walking Man I, which went for £65 million in February 2010. –

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