When Lilly Cassirer
and her family fled the Holocaust in 1939, she traded the painting by Camille
Pissarro for passage out of the country
This May 12, 2005
file photo shows an unidentified visitor viewing the Impressionist painting
called "Rue St.-Honore, Apres-Midi, Effet de Pluie" painted in 1897
by Camille Pissarro, on display in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in
Madrid.Mariana Eliano / ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — A
federal judge in Los Angeles ruled Tuesday that a Spanish museum that acquired
a priceless, Nazi-looted painting in 1992 is the work’s rightful owner, and not
the survivors of the Jewish woman who surrendered it 80 years ago to escape the
Holocaust.
Although U.S.
District Judge John F. Walter criticized Baron Hans-Heinrich
Thyssen-Bornemisza, the German industrialist whose name now graces the Madrid
museum where the painting by Camille Pissarro hangs, for not doing all of the
due diligence he could have when he acquired it in 1976, he found no evidence
the museum knew it was looted art when it took possession in 1993.
Under Spanish law,
he ruled, the painting is legally the museum’s, although he also criticized
Spain, calling its decision to keep it “inconsistent” with international
agreements that it and other countries have signed “based upon the moral
principle that art and cultural property confiscated by the Nazis from
Holocaust (Shoah) victims should be returned to them or their heirs.”
The museum’s U.S.
attorney, Thaddeus Stauber, said he believes the decision finally puts an end
to a bitter legal fight that has pitted the family of Lilly Cassirer against
the museum for 20 years.
“I think it puts an
end to it because the court conducted, and we conducted, what the appellate
court asked us to, which was a full trial on the merits,” he told The
Associated Press. “As a lawyer who has been involved in this case for 14 years,
I’m pleased that the court did conduct a full trial. We now have a decision on
the lawful owner and that should put an end to it.”
Walter, who has seen
the case returned to court twice by appeals and conducted the trial Stauber
mentioned last December, indicated in his 34-page ruling that another appeal
still could be possible.
A lawyer for Lilly
Cassirer’s great-grandson, David Cassirer of San Diego, didn’t say whether the
family plans to appeal.
“We respectfully
disagree that the court cannot force the Kingdom of Spain to comply with its
moral commitments,” attorney Steve Zack said.
The painting at
issue, Pissarro’s “Rue St.-Honore, Apres-Midi, Effet de Pluie,” is a stunning
oil-on-canvas work depicting a rainy Paris street scene the artist observed
from his window in 1897.
It was purchased
directly from Pissarro’s art dealer in 1900 by the father-in-law of Lilly
Cassirer, who eventually inherited it and displayed it in her home for years.
When she and her family fled the Holocaust in 1939 she traded it for passage
out of the country.
For years the family
thought it was lost, and the German government paid her $13,000 in reparations
in 1958.
Then in 1999 a
friend of her grandson, Claude, who had seen photos of the painting, discovered
it was in the Thyssen-Bornemisza. It had been hanging there since shortly after
a non-profit foundation funded by Spain bought the baron’s entire collection
for $350 million and named the museum for him.
The painting had
been sold and resold after Cassirer and her family fled Germany. The baron, a
German industrialist who settled later in Spain, bought it from a U.S. dealer
for $300,000 in 1976.
The baron never hid
the painting, putting it on exhibition often.
“The court finds
that there were sufficient suspicious circumstances or ‘red flags’ which should
have prompted the baron to conduct additional inquires as to the seller’s
title,” the judge said.
Still, despite
missing and torn provenance labels, the judge concluded that the baron and the
museum foundation did not know the work was looted, and under Spanish law that
allows the museum to keep it.
https://nationalpost.com/news/la-judge-rules-spanish-museum-can-keep-nazi-looted-painting
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