Nazi art: Germany says it has handed over 14 works from Gurlitt trove
German authorities have now handed over all 14 works from the art trove accumulated by Cornelius Gurlitt that are proven to have been looted under Nazi rule, the government said.
Piano Playing, a drawing by Carl Spitzweg, was handed over to Christie’s auction house on Tuesday at the request of the heirs of its rightful owner, Henri Hinrichsen.
The work was seized from Hinrichsen, a Jewish music publisher, in 1939. The following year it was bought by Gurlitt’s father, Hildebrand Gurlitt, an art dealer who traded in works confiscated by the Nazis. Hinrichsen was killed at the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942.
The reclusive Cornelius Gurlitt, who died in 2014, had squirrelled away more than 1,200 works in his Munich apartment and a further 250 or so at a property in Salzburg. He inherited much of the collection from his father.
More
More
Unravelling the mysteries behind the Gurlitt art collection
This content was published on
A collection left to the Museum of Fine Arts in Bern by the son of a Nazi art collector is now on show in the Swiss capital.
The collection was unearthed by chance in 2012, 15 months after German custom officers carried out a routine search of passengers on a train from Switzerland and found 77-year-old Gurlitt with €9,000 (CHF9,700) in cash – just below the €10,000 reporting limit.
The German authorities, suspecting he was a tax dodger, entered his flat and were stunned to find it packed with masterpieces by artists such as Picasso, Renoir and Matisse whose value has been estimated at several hundred million francs.
Provenance research
After Gurlitt’s death in 2014, the Bern Museum of Fine Arts was appointed sole heir – to its great surprise – and took charge of the estate. In an agreement with Germany, it was stipulated that provenance research would be carried out in Germany. Bern undertook to make a substantial contribution to this research.
In 2017 the Bern Museum of Fine Arts became the first museum in Switzerland to open a department for provenance research.
A trickle of works has been handed back in recent years as the painstaking process of provenance research made gradual progress.
More
More
Research formally ended into controversial Nazi art collection
This content was published on
Systematic research into the origin of the 1,500 or so works in the spectacular collection of Cornelius Gurlitt has largely been completed.
More people switching to generic medicine in Switzerland
This content was published on
Measures to encourage more people in Switzerland to use generic medicine in place of brand name originals appear to be working.
Nature magazine: scientific breakthroughs in medicine and space travel in 2025
This content was published on
The science magazine Nature expects breakthroughs in mind-reading machines, new weight-loss drugs, and particle physics in 2025.
This content was published on
Swiss minister Karin Keller-Sutter wants to use Platform X to communicate with the population during her term as president in 2025.
Swiss Post delivers record number of parcels in pre-Christmas period
This content was published on
Swiss Post delivered a total of 22.3 million parcels between the Black Friday promotional week at the end of November and Christmas.
SWISS plane in Graz: employee still in intensive care
This content was published on
The cabin crew member of the SWISS Airbus A220 which made an emergency landing in Graz, Austria, on Monday is still in intensive care.
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.
Read more
More
Germany returns Nazi art from Gurlitt trove to French family
This content was published on
Germany has returned three works of art to a descendant of a Jewish French collector who owned them until his death in 1941 in Nazi-occupied France.
This content was published on
The Kunstmuseum Bern has sold a painting by Édouard Manet from its controversial Gurlitt collection to Tokyo for $4 million.
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.