Imperial Valley Press

Painting, stolen by Nazi soldier, is back in Florence museum

- BY FRANCES D’EMILIO AND GREGORIO BORGIA

FLORENCE, Italy — A Dutch still-life painting, stolen by retreating Nazis and sent by a German soldier as a present to his wife, came back to a Florence museum on Friday, thanks largely to a relentless campaign by the Uffizi Galleries’ director, a German.

The foreign ministers of German and Italy were on hand Friday at Palazzo Pitti, a Renaissanc­e palace that is part of the Uffizi Galleries, for the unveiling of “Flower Vase,” a masterpiec­e by Jan van Huysum, an early 18th-century artist whose exquisitel­y detailed still-life works were highly sought in his day.

Uffizi director Eike Schmidt earlier this year urged his native country to return the work. He had posted on a gallery wall three labels where the painting had hung before being taken during World War II: “stolen,” the labels read in Italian, English and German.

His homeland, Schmidt said at the time, had a “moral duty” to return the work.

Italian Foreign Minister Enzo Moavero hailed the “civic and moral courage of a German director of an Italian museum” in pursuing the painting’s return. As did his German counterpar­t, Moavero hailed the happy ending, saying it was achieved through “real Europeanis­m, of concrete facts” and not just words.

He revealed to reporters that the painting’s return was discussed, among other matters, during bilateral talks between Italy and Germany.

“Flower Vase” is so realistic it has been likened to a photograph. Van Huysum used a magnifying glass to study his subjects. Ripples are visible in insects’ transparen­t wings, to name just one striking detail on the returned painting.

The painting was acquired in 1824 by a grand duke of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty, which followed the Medicis in residing in the palace in Florence.

Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, the palace’s artworks were packed for safekeepin­g into wooden crates and moved from villa to villa. When the Germany army was retreating, the crates were added to other war booty and eventually ended up in Bolzano, an Alpine city near Austria. There the crate containing “Flower Vase” was opened, and in July 1944, a German soldier sent the painting to his wife in Germany.

 ??  ?? The “Vase of Flowers” painting by Jan van Huysum, is unveiled during a ceremony at the Pitti Palace, part of the Uffizi Galleries, in Florence, Italy, on Friday. AP PHOTO/GREGORIO BORGIA
The “Vase of Flowers” painting by Jan van Huysum, is unveiled during a ceremony at the Pitti Palace, part of the Uffizi Galleries, in Florence, Italy, on Friday. AP PHOTO/GREGORIO BORGIA

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