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Swiss museum reaches deal to keep Gauguin work swept up in WWII

Swiss museum reaches deal to keep Gauguin work swept up in WWII

Observer5 days ago
A painting by French post-Impressionist master Paul Gaugin whose Jewish owner sold it under duress after fleeing Nazi Germany will remain in a Swiss museum under a deal announced Tuesday.
The 1884 painting, "The Street", is part of the vast art collection of the late German-Swiss arms tycoon Emil Buehrle, which has ignited controversy over accusations he acquired many of the pieces in questionable circumstances during World War II.
The painting's previous owner, German Jewish businessman Richard Semmel, sold it at auction in Geneva in 1937 to support himself and his wife after being forced to flee Nazi persecution, said the Buehrle Foundation, which now has custody over the late tycoon's collection.
Buehrle, who died in 1956, left a vast collection of hundreds of pieces including works by Picasso, Van Gogh, Monet, Renoir, Cezanne, Rembrandt and Degas.
But his foundation and the museum housing the collection, Zurich's renowned Kunsthaus, have faced claims that many of the paintings were looted during the Holocaust or acquired from Jews forced to sell them under duress.
The Kunsthaus hired experts to trace the works' origins, and last year announced it was removing five paintings over concerns about Nazi looting, including "The Street".
But it has now reached a deal with Semmel's heirs to continue displaying the painting, the foundation said.
The parties "agreed on a settlement due to Semmel's life circumstances and his emigration as a result of Nazi persecution", it said in a statement.
"The painting will remain in the Emil Buehrle Collection and can continue to be exhibited at the Kunsthaus Zurich.
Details of the agreement were not released.
Semmel's heirs are the granddaughters of a woman named Grete Gross, an old acquaintance from Berlin who cared for him in his later years until his death, childless and impoverished, in New York in 1950. —AFP
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Observer

time5 days ago

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Swiss museum reaches deal to keep Gauguin work swept up in WWII

A painting by French post-Impressionist master Paul Gaugin whose Jewish owner sold it under duress after fleeing Nazi Germany will remain in a Swiss museum under a deal announced Tuesday. The 1884 painting, "The Street", is part of the vast art collection of the late German-Swiss arms tycoon Emil Buehrle, which has ignited controversy over accusations he acquired many of the pieces in questionable circumstances during World War II. The painting's previous owner, German Jewish businessman Richard Semmel, sold it at auction in Geneva in 1937 to support himself and his wife after being forced to flee Nazi persecution, said the Buehrle Foundation, which now has custody over the late tycoon's collection. Buehrle, who died in 1956, left a vast collection of hundreds of pieces including works by Picasso, Van Gogh, Monet, Renoir, Cezanne, Rembrandt and Degas. But his foundation and the museum housing the collection, Zurich's renowned Kunsthaus, have faced claims that many of the paintings were looted during the Holocaust or acquired from Jews forced to sell them under duress. The Kunsthaus hired experts to trace the works' origins, and last year announced it was removing five paintings over concerns about Nazi looting, including "The Street". But it has now reached a deal with Semmel's heirs to continue displaying the painting, the foundation said. The parties "agreed on a settlement due to Semmel's life circumstances and his emigration as a result of Nazi persecution", it said in a statement. "The painting will remain in the Emil Buehrle Collection and can continue to be exhibited at the Kunsthaus Zurich. Details of the agreement were not released. Semmel's heirs are the granddaughters of a woman named Grete Gross, an old acquaintance from Berlin who cared for him in his later years until his death, childless and impoverished, in New York in 1950. —AFP

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