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Art Institute to defend ownership of artwork New York authorities contend was stolen during Holocaust

Egon Schiele’s “Russian War Prisoner” (left) remains for now at the Art Institute of Chicago, while “Portrait of a Man” (center) and “Girl With Black Hair” (right) in the collections of two other museums, will be returned to heirs of Fritz Grünbaum as part of an investigation by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Associated Press

The Art Institute of Chicago will soon get to make its case that it is the rightful owner of a $1.25 million watercolor that prosecutors in New York believe was stolen from a Jewish cabaret star killed during the Holocaust.

Oral arguments in the case are set to begin April 3, according to a spokesperson for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office, which in September issued warrants seizing three of Egon Schiele’s works.

One was “Russian War Prisoner,” a watercolor on paper, at the Art Institute.

The two other pieces — “Portrait of a Man” at the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh and “Girl With Black Hair” at the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College in Ohio — will be returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, who previously owned all three works.

Grünbaum was a cabaret performer and songwriter who was killed at the Dachau concentration camp in 1941. His heirs believe he was forced to hand over his collection under duress.

The spokesperson for the district attorney’s office said a judge granted the application to officially turn over “Portrait of a Man” and “Girl With Black Hair” to Grünbaum’s heirs on Monday after the museums consented to their return.

“Russian War Prisoner” by Egon Schiele.

Art Institute of Chicago

But “Russian War Prisoner” remains in the collection of the Art Institute. A spokesperson for the museum said in a statement that its ownership of the drawing “rests on different facts than works at other institutions” and they will “continue to defend our legal ownership of this work.”

According to Bragg’s office, an investigation “has revealed that Grünbaum’s collection, particularly his 80-plus works by Egon Schiele, were systematically stolen from Grünbaum after he was imprisoned (and ultimately murdered) in the Dachau Concentration Camp.”

The drawings were then laundered through Switzerland before being sold to a gallery owner in New York, the application states. Manhattan prosecutors believe they have jurisdiction in all of the cases because the artworks were bought and sold by Manhattan art dealers at some point.

Before the warrants were issued in September, the Grünbaum heirs had filed civil claims against the three museums and several other defendants seeking the return of artworks they say were looted from Grünbaum.

In November, a judge granted the Art Institute’s motion to dismiss the suit because the heirs filed claims after the statute of limitations had expired, according to a court order.

Grünbaum’s heirs demanded the Art Institute return “Russian War Prisoner” in January of 2006, but the museum declined, according to the court order. The statute of limitations expired in 2009, “long before” the heirs filed claims in New York in December 2022.

Several of Schiele’s other drawings have already been returned, including one that was owned by billionaire Ronald Lauder, heir to the Estee Lauder cosmetics fortune.

“Russian War Prisoner” is valued at around $1.25 million. The Art Institute bought the piece in 1966 for an unknown sum, its website states. “Portrait of a Man,” a pencil on paper drawing, is valued at $1 million. “Girl With Black Hair,” a watercolor and pencil on paper work is valued at $1.5 million.

According to the Art Institute’s website, “Russian War Prisoner” has been shown in at least eight exhibitions internationally. Among the exhibits was “Great Drawings from The Art Institute of Chicago: The Harold Joachim Years 1958-1983,” in 1985 at the Art Institute and later traveling to the Saint Louis Art Museum.

Schiele is well known for his emotionally charged, bluntly realistic and often sexually explicit drawings of elongated, distorted figures. In 1912, he was convicted of showing erotic art in a place accessible to children and imprisoned, and his works were later deemed “degenerate art” by the Nazis.

Because his drawings and paintings were avidly acquired by Jewish collectors whose holdings were then looted by the Nazis, many restitution claims have been made surrounding his work.

Another painting, “Portrait of Wally” (1912), was seized by authorities after a 1997-98 Schiele show in New York. After a much-publicized legal dispute, Vienna’s Leopold Museum reached a $19 million settlement in 2010 with heirs of its former owner.

The dispute over the Schiele drawings isn’t the first time that the Art Institute has had to answer questions on the issue of provenance.

Last March, an investigation by ProPublica and Crain’s Chicago Business found evidence that at least several pieces in its large collection of South Asian art may have been stolen and illegally exported.

The Art Institute has a page on its website dedicated to its process of researching the provenance of a work.

“We seek to establish an object’s chain of ownership from the moment it leaves the artist’s hands to its entry in the museum’s collection,” the website states.

It adds that researching provenance can be a challenge because wars, world events, passage of time or other factors can create gaps in the records of some art pieces.

“For these reasons, incomplete provenance information does not necessarily mean that a work has been tainted by the events of the Nazi era or that it has been looted from a country,” the site states.

Museums across the globe have been grappling with the issue of provenance. Last month, New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art said it would return more than a dozen pieces of artwork tied to looting to Cambodia and Thailand.

In August 2022, the Horniman Museum and Gardens in London said it would return dozens of artifacts that were looted more than a century ago to the Nigerian government.

Contributing: The Associated Press and freelance arts writer Kyle MacMillan

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