I recently tackled the public discussion in Germany about whether to rename the Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz, the foundation that oversees the State Museums of Berlin and some of the most remarkable collections in the world. Readers of the Art Law Report will know this name well, the SPK is the defendant in the lawsuit brought by my clients for the restitution of the Welfenschatz, or Guelphe Treasure, that the Supreme Court heard in 2020. While I've never been shy about criticizing the SPK about its approach in our our case (which is on appeal, briefs here and here), this piece addresses a different question. Namely, what place does the name "Prussia" have in the 21st century? For anyone like me who still thinks about the historical sliding doors of the Grossdeutschelösung and Kleindeutschelösungdebate of the 19th century about how to unite the German-speaking states and duchies, this piece is for you.
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Topics:
Holy Roman Empire,
Prussia,
"Elephant Mural",
Martin Luther,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Sueddeutsche Zeitung,
Hermann Goering,
Der Spiegel,
Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation,
Andy Warhol,
Welfenschatz,
Humboldt Forum,
C. Montgomery Burns,
Claudia Roth,
Siam,
Sigismund of Luxembourg,
Friedrich VI,
Hohenzollern,
Brandenburg,
Kaliningrad,
Augustus II the Strong,
Nefertiti,
Pergamon Altar,
Annalena Bärbock,
Monika Grütters,
Götz Aly,
Joseph Beuys,
Königsberg,
Nazism,
Konrad Adenauer,
Hermann Parzinger,
Luf Boat,
Bild
After months of relative inactivity, there was news this week in the saga of Cornelius Gurlitt, the reclusive German man from whose apartments in Munich and Salzburg more than 1,280 objects were seized as part of a tax investigation, objects that came under suspicion of Nazi looting because of the privileged position held by his father Hildebrand Gurlitt. Unfortunately, the latest news continues a string of public relations efforts that bespeak no real progress as we approach the second anniversary of the public awareness of the story. Quite unlike the plaudits that were thrown around by many last year (though not by us) concerning Germany’s agreement with Gurlitt’s named heir, the reaction has been appropriately skeptical this time.
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Topics:
cultural property,
Sepp Dürr,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Art Hall of the Federal Republic of Germany,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Bonn Minister of Culture,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Entartete Kunst,
Munich,
World Jewish Congress,
Salzburg,
Restitution,
Müncher Kunstfund,
Der Spiegel,
World War II,
Task Force,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
Museums,
Monika Grütters,
Raubkunst,
Green Party,
Kunsthalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland,
Ronald Lauder
Ongoing events have weakened irrevocably the triumphalist message that Germany had hoped to send with its November agreement concerning the Gurlitt bequest to the Kunstmuseum Bern, and the January opening of the Deutsches Zentrum für Kulturgutverluste (the German Center for Lost Cultural Property). Instead, the self-congratulatory air that surrounded those events is starting to look like a premature "Mission Accomplished" moment.
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Topics:
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Holocaust Art Restitution Project,
Uta Werner,
Adolph von Menzel,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Seated Woman,
Sachsenhausen,
Matisse,
Saturday Night Live,
George Eduard Behrens,
Advisory Commission,
Hamburg,
L. Behrens & Söhne,
Gurlitt,
German Cultural Minister,
Der Spiegel,
Hjalmar Schacht,
German Center for Lost Cultural Property,
Minister of Economics,
Marc Masurovsky,
Washington Principles,
Kristallnacht,
Monika Grütters,
Great Depression,
Deutsches Zentrum für Kulturgutverluste,
Pariser Wochentag,
Paris Weekday,
Welfenschatz,
Limbach Commission,
Heidelberg
As the world adjusts to the announcement last week that the Kunstmuseum Bern has decided to accept Cornelius Gurlitt’s bequest (amid the continuing uncertainty about the validity of the will itself), the most significant development has been the museum’s posting of an inventory of the objects themselves. The museum issued a press release that states:
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Topics:
Swiss Info,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Monopol,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Entartete Kunst,
Restitution,
Bavaria,
Der Spiegel,
Wall Street Journal,
World War II,
Degenerate Art Action,
degenerate art,
beschlagnahmte Kunst,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
Museums,
Münchner Kunstfund
As expected, the press conference today in Berlin held by the Kunstmuseum Bern along with German officials announced that the museum has decided to accept the appointment as Cornelius Gurlitt's heir. As we surmised, the decision was accompanied by an agreement concerning the Nazi-looting suspicions that have followed the one time collection of his father Hildebrand Gurlitt. Hildebrand was one of a select few art dealers authorized during the Nazi regime to sell what the authorities deemed "degenerate art" (see link above for more background).
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Topics:
Swiss Info,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Monopol,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Entartete Kunst,
Willbald Gurlitt,
Restitution,
Bavaria,
Der Spiegel,
Wall Street Journal,
World War II,
Degenerate Art Action,
degenerate art,
beschlagnahmte Kunst,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
Münchner Kunstfund
The federal government of Germany, the Bavarian Ministry of Culture, and the Kunstmuseum Bern announced today that they will hold a joint press conference on Monday November 24, 2014 concerning the bequest by Cornelius Gurlitt to the Swiss museum when he died. It seems hard to imagine that such an event would announce anything other than acceptance by the museum and perhaps some sort of side agreement with Germany and/or Bavaria.
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Topics:
Swiss Info,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Monopol,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Entartete Kunst,
Willbald Gurlitt,
Restitution,
Bavaria,
Der Spiegel,
Wall Street Journal,
World War II,
Degenerate Art Action,
degenerate art,
beschlagnahmte Kunst,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
Münchner Kunstfund
There were reports over the weekend that the Gurlitt Task Force, currently reviewing the provenance of more than 900 of the 1,280 works of art seized from Cornelius Gurlitt’s apartment, may not complete that review within the year reportedly set out in the agreement between Bavaria and Gurlitt before he died. There is still confusion about whether the Task Force was indeed foreshadowing a missed deadline (the agreement was in April, so the notion that the review would continue “into 2015” is not necessarily inconsistent with completing its task within one year), but assuming it was, what happens then?
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Topics:
Focus,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Gurlitt Task Force,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
Commission for Looted Art in Europe,
Entartete Kunst,
Anne Webber,
Restitution,
Der Spiegel,
World War II,
degenerate art,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
verschollene Kunst,
Münchner Kunstfund
It has now been one year since Focus magazine in Germany broke the Cornelius Gurlitt story on November 3, 2013. Looking back at the history of the case as it has unfolded since then, the overriding theme has been difficulty in obtaining accurate information about the current state of affairs. The appointed Task Force has made only two recommendations, and the status of the bequest to the Kunstmuseum Bern is still up in the air. And nobody seems remotely pleased.
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Topics:
Focus,
Schwabinger Kunstfund,
Hildebrand Gurlitt,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Drefsden,
Gurlitt Task Force,
Nazi-looted art,
Gurlitt Collection,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
Lex Gurlitt,
Entartete Kunst,
Salzburg,
Bundesrat,
Restitution,
Der Spiegel,
World War II,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities,
Switzerland,
degenerate art,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
verschollene Kunst,
Münchner Kunstfund,
Ronald Lauder
As if the Cornelius/Hildebrand Gurlitt saga needed any more complications as the world awaits the official decision by the Kunstmuseum Bern about whether to accept the appointment as Cornelius Gurlitt’s heir, even more artwork has apparently turned up. Der Spiegel, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, and the Wall Street Journal have reported that one picture and several sculptures in the very apartment from which the original trove was seized more than two years ago. Among the sculptures are apparently a Degas and a Rodin. Nothing else seems known about the works or their ownership history, or whether they might be among works that Hildebrand Gurlitt sold or acquired as "degenerate" (side note: the Victoria and Albert Museum's copy of the Degenerate Art Action register is currently on display in New York at the Neue Galerie's exhibition of that title. While it is available online, it is most certainly worth a visit before the show ends).
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Topics:
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
Victoria and Albert Museum,
Rodin,
Cornelius Gurlitt,
Schwabinger Kunstfund. Kunstfund München,
Gurlitt Task Force,
Fall Gurlitt,
Gurlitt Collection,
Degas,
Hildebrand Gurlit,
Entartete Kunst,
Gurlitt,
Restitution,
Bavaria,
Neue Galerie,
Der Spiegel,
Wall Street Journal,
World War II,
Degenerate Art Action,
degenerate art,
Kunstmuseum Bern,
www.lostart.de,
Nazi art,
Raubkunst
Quite by coincidence, two stories we have covered in the last few days have centered around the claims by the heirs of Paul von Mendelssohn Bartholdy, a Jewish banker and art collector who was the target of Nazi persecution before he died in 1935: Julius Schoeps, Edelgard von Lavergne-Peguilhen, and Florence Kesselstatt. Another common thread has been the Bavarian State Paintings Collection (the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlung), which is in the news again for possible claims, but this time from heirs of quite a different sort.
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Topics:
Paul von Mendelssohn Bartholdy,
Fritz Bamberger,
Focus,
Florence Kesselstatt,
Karl Blechen,
Karl Ernst Baumann,
Julius Schoeps,
Dr Alexander Lewin,
Germany,
Anselm Feuerbach,
Hans Sachs,
German Advisory Commission for the Return of Cultu,
Gurlitt case,
Edelgard von Lavergne-Peguilhen,
Julius and Clara Freund,
Eva Braun,
Nürnberger Institut,
Johann J. August von der Embde,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
'Stürmer-Bibliothek',
Wilhelm Leibl,
Jim Tobias,
Portrait der Familie von Dithfurth,
Restitution,
Bavarian State Paintings Collection,
Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlung,
Der Spiegel,
World War II,
Peasant Girl without a Hat and with a White Headcl,
Pinakothek der Moderne,
Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation,
Austria,
Andrea Bambi Mountain Landscape on the Spanish Coa,
Jutta Limbach,
Washington Principles,
Der Stürmer,
Welfenschatz,
Limbach Commission