Miriam Cahn plans to pull works from Zurich Art Museum over Bührle Collection
Miriam Cahn's comments come after a media conference by the museum and the Bührle Foundation last week to respond to some of the criticism about the decision to display the controversial collection.
Keystone / Christian Charisius
Internationally renowned Swiss artist Miriam Cahn says she wants to remove all her works on display at the Zurich Art Museum in response to the outcry over the Bührle collection. Paintings in the collection are suspected of being linked to art looted by the Nazis.
This content was published on
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA/jdp
Español
es
Cahn planea retirar su obra del Museo de Zúrich por la Colección Bührle
“I no longer want to be represented in ‘this’ art museum in Zurich,” Cahn said in a letter to the Jewish weekly TachlesExternal link, published on Wednesday and obtained by media agency Keystone-SDA. “I wish to remove all my works from the Zurich Art Museum. I will buy them back at the original sale price,” said the 72-year-old artist, who is Jewish.
She called out the museum for its “historical blindness” and criticised the “opaque mixing” between the museum, the city and various other parties that she argues led to the “stupid loan contract” of the Bührle Collection.
More
The fight for gender equality in Swiss art institutions
Art museums are still mostly occupied by works made by men. Awareness has only recently been raised in Switzerland, stirring the cultural scene.
The inclusion of around 200 works from the Bührle Collection into the new extension of the museum, which opened this autumn, has sparked controversy over its origins. Wealthy industrialist Emil Georg Bührle, who died in 1956, earned much of his wealth through the sale of arms to Germany during and after the Second World War. His fortune allowed him to build up an art collection which he bequeathed to the foundation.
The Bührle Foundation says none of the works on display were looted from Jews but the museum’s decision to display works from the foundation is still seen as an affront to victims of the Holocaust. Following calls from local public officials, the museum has said it will set up an independent commission to investigate the provenance of the works.
Born in Basel, Cahn’s paintings can be found in numerous museums including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Tate Museum in London.
More
More
Bührle Foundation director to step down
This content was published on
Lukas Gloor, the director of the Bührle Foundation – from which the controversial Bührle art collection comes – will step down at the end of the year.
Swiss army identifies gaps in civil aircraft collision warning system
This content was published on
The Cyber-Defence Campus of the Swiss defence ministry has found two vulnerabilities in the collision warning system for civil aviation.
Swiss parents rely on savings accounts for their children instead of investment funds
This content was published on
According to the survey, over 60% of parents start saving in the first year of life, and around 10% even before the child is born.
Half the Swiss army’s M113 armoured vehicles rehabilitated
This content was published on
Half of the Swiss army's 248 M113 grenadier armoured vehicles are back on the road after being temporarily decommisioned.
Voters in Zurich reject pay rise for local politicians
This content was published on
Local parliamentarians in Zurich will not receive a pay hike after 53.2% of voters in the city came out against the plan on Sunday.
Minimum wage narrowly rejected in canton Basel Country
This content was published on
The Unia trade union initiative had called for a minimum wage of CHF22 ($24.20) per hour for all employees working in the canton.
Nazi-looted art: Is the Kunsthaus Zurich a ‘tainted museum’?
This content was published on
The new extension of Zurich’s fine art museum opens this weekend with the Bührle collection. A controversial choice for some.
This content was published on
Housing the art collection of arms dealer Emil Bührle in the Zurich Kunsthaus will do little to quell decades-old controversies.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.