(Q59512480)

English

In Two Cases, Families of Victims Ask Court for Return of Nazi-looted Art

news article, JTA

In more languages
default for all languages
No label defined

No description defined

Statements

1 reference
Although the case involves two different families and two different paintings, the pleadings were combined because they involved the same art dealer and identical issues, said Los Angeles attorney E. Randol Schoenberg.The art dealer is Stephen Hahn, a gallery owner formerly in New York and now in Santa Barbara, Calif.According to court records, in 1975 Hahn sold Picasso’s “Femme en Blanc” to a private Chicago collector, Marilyn Alsdorf.In 2002, Thomas Bennigson, a University of California law student in Oakland, tracked down the painting’s provenance, which showed that the Picasso had belonged to his grandmother, Carlota Landsberg of Berlin, before being taken forcibly by the Nazis.In 1976, Hahn sold Pissarro’s “Rue de Saint Honore Apres Midi, Effet de Pluie” to Baron Hans Heinrich Thyssen, whose family allegedly had close ties to Hitler.Recently, Claude Cassirer of San Diego spotted a picture of the painting in a catalogue of the Thyssen collection.Cassirer’s grandmother, Lilly Neubauer-Cassirer, a German Jew, had been forced to sell the Pissarro for a fraction of its value under Nazi pressure. (English)
1 reference
Actress Elizabeth Taylor has won a judgment in her struggle to retain a van Gogh painting that has been claimed as Nazi-looted art. The ruling in Taylor’s efforts to keep van Gogh’s “View of the Asylum and Chapel at Saint-Remy” has been accompanied by a development in another art case dating from the Holocaust era.In the decision announced Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Gary Klausner ruled against Canadian attorney Andrew Orkin because the statute of limitations has expired.At stake in the Taylor case is which the actress bought 41 years ago for $257,000 but is now believed to be worth between $10 million and $15 million.Her ownership has been contested by Orkin, who claims that the painting had been confiscated by the Hitler regime from his great-grandmother, Margarete Mauthner, who then lived in Berlin and later emigrated to South Africa.Orkin said he had been advised not to comment on the case, but his attorney, Tom Hamilton, issued a statement claiming judicial errors and announcing a possible appeal. (English)
0 references
 
edit
    edit
      edit
        edit
          edit
            edit
              edit
                edit
                  edit