Regina Leader-Post

The mystery of Cezanne’s orphan

Curator must find owner of rare painting

- IAN MACLEOD

OTTAWA — A long-lost painting by one of France’s greatest artists has surfaced at the National Gallery of Canada.

Seventy-three years after it was spirited out of Nazi-occupied France only to be seized by the British Royal Navy as suspected enemy property, a watercolou­r by Paul Cezanne has reemerged at the centre of a capital mystery. It dwells in a vault in the gallery’s curatorial wing, the last remnant of a staggering collection of French art deposited in Ottawa for safekeepin­g during the Second World War. In the spring 1949, the 600-odd works by Cezanne, Renoir, Gauguin, Degas, Picasso and others were returned to two rival European owners during a peculiar repatriati­on in downtown Ottawa.

The Cezanne landscape, Groupe d’arbres (c. 1890), was somehow left behind. Over the years, it slipped into a deep curatorial void. The authoritat­ive 1983 catalogue raisonne of Cezanne’s watercolou­rs says its whereabout­s is “unknown.”

This week, responding to questions from Postmedia News, the gallery acknowledg­ed it has held the missing Cezanne all along.

“I have no idea why it was orphaned, but we’re kind of left with this mystery to resolve,” Marc Mayer, gallery director and CEO, said.

“It’s a very, very, very complicate­d file. This is probably the most mysterious of all the files that we have of things that are here (for) whom we don’t know who is the owner. We have never pretended to own it and we don’t pretend to own it. Until a rightful owner emerges, we just take care of it.”

Attempts to locate possible heirs to the 1949 owners have failed, he said.

Yet, after the collection’s return to Europe, the rival parties each wrote to the gallery to say they were missing a painting.

One claimant, in fact, repeatedly said he appeared to be missing a Cezanne, though Groupe d’arbres was not specifical­ly mentioned. His widow later wrote five letters to the gallery in search of the work.

Mayer said it is not clear how gallery officials at the time responded. “There are gaps in our knowledge.”

On at least one occasion, however, they replied that no Cezanne had been left at the gallery, according a timeline of events the gallery provided to Postmedia News.

The gallery’s 1952 annual report offered a brief descriptio­n about the collection’s wartime stay in Ottawa and a subsequent cross-Canada exhibit of some of the works.

But since the gallery does not own Groupe d’arbres, it has never listed it among its collection, put it on display or publicly noted its existence.

Mayer bristled at the suggestion the gallery has knowingly sat on the painting all these years.

“We’re not known for these kinds of dastardly doings. We have returned Nazi war loot before, we have returned spoliated things that the Chinese claimed were exported from China. That’s not how we build the national collection of Canada.

“All we know is that at some point, everybody just sort of ignored it. Then it re-emerges again in the 1960s and then it re-emerged again. It’s not that the museum made no effort, it’s just that the thing seems to have not interested anybody who was the rightful heir.

“This is just one of those things that we’re kind of stuck holding the bag here and, hopefully, we’ll be able to resolve it one day.”

There is no doubt the painting is a Cezanne, one of 645 watercolou­rs he created. It is probably a scene from his native Provence. Like many of his works, it is unsigned. And though it is unfinished and was quite possibly intended only as a preparator­y work, “anything by Cezanne is of significan­ce,” said Mayer. “He’s a titan in the history of modern art.”

Another Cezanne watercolou­r not seen in public for 53 years re-emerged from a private collection in Texas last year and sold at auction for $19.1 million U.S.

Mayer said no value has been establishe­d for Groupe d’arbres.

How the small-scale watercolou­r on paper became lost in Ottawa is a fascinatin­g tale.

In May or June 1940, as Hitler’s tanks and troops prepared to storm Paris, a shady Corsican and Parisian art broker, Martin Fabiani, shipped the glittering collection to Spain and then to Lisbon. Hundreds of works by a pantheon of modern French artists — Cezanne, Renoir, Picasso, Derain, Roualt, Daumier, Gauguin and others — were among the cargo, along with some rare books.

There is no doubt Fabiani legally acquired the 600-plus paintings and drawings in 1940 from Lucien Vollard of Paris. Vollard was the brother of Ambroise Vollard, an influentia­l Parisian art dealer with a passion for the avant-garde.

Around the turn of the 19th century, Ambroise Vollard’s keen eye for undiscover­ed talent was drawn to the then little-known Cezanne (1839-1906) and several artists who became leading painters of the modern era.

Vollard in 1895 organized Cezanne’s first solo exhibition that helped catapult him to fame. It also establishe­d Vollard as the exclusive dealer for Cezanne’s works.

He amassed a spectacula­r collection of impression­ist and post-impression­ist French art. At the time of

“THIS IS JUST ONE OF THOSE THINGS THAT WE’RE KIND OF STUCK HOLDING THE BAG HERE AND, HOPEFULLY, WE’LL BE ABLE TO RESOLVE IT ONE DAY..” MARC MAYER

his death in 1939, in a car accident near Paris, thousands of unframed canvasses of works by the era’s great French masters reportedly filled all but two rooms of his home.

In addition to his brother Lucien, Vollard willed part of the collection to his mistress. Much of the famed Vollard Collection now resides in galleries and private collection­s around the world.

Fabiani was an associate of both Lucien and Ambroise Vollard and it is believed he purchased a share of the Vollard Collection from Lucien. The Vollards also had two aging sisters, Leontine and Jeanne, and another brother, Felix, in an asylum.

Word somehow spread in the summer of 1940 that Fabiani had moved the paintings out of France.

The British Admiralty was alerted and, around September 1940, learned Fabiani would be moving the collection to Bermuda aboard the U.S. ocean liner S. S. Excalibur. British naval officers and customs officials boarded the Excalibur when it docked in Bermuda. The ship’s captain, S.N. Groves, was forced to open the liner’s safe where the paintings were stowed in four wooden crates. The cargo was addressed to the Bignou Gallery in New York.

A file on Fabiani at Library and Archives Canada contains a 1949 letter to the former Office of the Custodian of Enemy Property from a Montreal lawyer representi­ng the Vollard sisters.

Thomas Vien, a former Liberal MP and then senator, wrote that at the time of the seizure it was suspected that Fabiani’s share of the Vollard Collection was being “shipped to South America to be hidden there.”

Because of Bermuda’s humidity, British minister of economic warfare Hugh Dalton said the art needed to moved to a more equable climate. A month later, the cargo was ordered to the National Gallery of Canada under the supervisio­n of the Exchequer Court of Canada acting for the Admiralty Marshall of England.

For the next eight and a half years, the Vollard Collection sat in storage inside the Victoria Museum Building on McLeod Street, then home to the gallery (and now the Canadian Museum of Nature).

Meanwhile, four months after the Germans surrendere­d in May 1945, Fabiani was reportedly arrested in Paris and fined for collaborat­ing with the enemy and dealing in Nazi-looted art. He was hit with a fine equivalent to almost $1 million.

In February 1948, Fabiani applied to Canada to have the collection released to him. He was advised he would first need approval from a British court. An inventory he prepared claimed there were 698 objects owing, mostly paintings and drawings, plus some rare books.

On April 29, 1949, the High Court of Justice of Great Britain Admiralty Division endorsed the earlier ruling of a French court and ordered the collection in Ottawa be divided and returned, with one-quarter going to the Vollard sisters and three-quarters to Fabiani. It is not clear whether the ruling was intended to punish Fabiani for his wartime associatio­n with the Germans.

One month later, on May 30, 1949, the two sides met at the gallery in Ottawa. The atmosphere appears to have been tense, if not hostile.

The Vollard sisters, who had no children, were represente­d by Edouard Jonas, an art specialist and former French parliament­arian.

The crates of unframed canvasses, drawings and watercolou­rs were opened and divided accordingl­y between Fabiani and Jonas. It’s believed many of the works were later sold.

The Vollard sisters, before their deaths, sold two Cezanne paintings, Portrait de paysan (c. 1900) and Foret (c. 1902-1904) and a Degas pastel, Chevaux de courses (c. 1895-1899), to the gallery in October 1950. All three came from the Vollard Collection.

Fabiani, too, rewarded the gallery in 1956 with the gift of a Renoir from his share of the collection, the beautiful sketch, Femme et enfant (Gabrielle et Jean, c. 1895).

Any potential heirs claiming title to the lost Cezanne would have to demonstrat­e that they are the rightful owners to the exclusion of anyone else, said Mayer.

“If you give something to the wrong person then you can be very easily sued by the rightful owners or a wrongful owner who feels he has a compelling case to be a rightful owner.

“So you really have to do your due diligence to make sure that whoever claims to own something, that they are actually the owner.”

But, “if the rightful heir emerges from the publicatio­n of (this) article, that would be great.”

 ?? NGC ?? Paul Cezanne’s Groupe d’arbres is probably a scene from his native and beloved Provence, France. The search for its rightful owner is a mystery.
NGC Paul Cezanne’s Groupe d’arbres is probably a scene from his native and beloved Provence, France. The search for its rightful owner is a mystery.
 ??  ?? Hitler at Trocadéro with the Eiffel Tower on 23 June 1940,
his architect Albert Speer on the left.
Hitler at Trocadéro with the Eiffel Tower on 23 June 1940, his architect Albert Speer on the left.

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