Museum Langmatt reaches settlement with Jewish heirs
Published: Thursday, Nov 28th 2024, 15:40
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The Langmatt Museum in Baden, Aargau, has found solutions for two impressionist paintings with the descendants of the former owners. Research into the provenance of both paintings had revealed evidence of Nazi-looted art.
A "just and fair solution" has been reached in the case of the painting "Fruit and Ginger Pot" by Paul Cézanne, the Langmatt Museum and the Langmatt Sidney and Jenny Brown Foundation announced on Thursday. A settlement agreement has been reached with the heirs of the former owner Jacob Goldschmidt (1896-1976).
The Langmatt Museum had this painting auctioned off in New York in November 2023 as one of three Cézanne works in order to secure the museum's long-term endowment. The total proceeds amounted to the equivalent of around 40 million francs).
As the museum reported, a document was found in the Central Archive for German and International Art Market Research in Cologne in the fall of 2023. This allows the conclusion that the sale of the Cézanne painting in November 1933 at the Lucerne gallery L'Art Moderne to Jenny and Sidney Brown should be qualified as a Nazi-persecution-related confiscation.
A small picture with a long history
The second case concerns the small-format painting "Fisherwomen on Berck Beach" by Eugène Boudin. The foundation has also contacted the painting's heirs and reached a settlement agreement, it was reported.
Accordingly, the painting remains in the possession of the foundation, while the heiresses were compensated at market value. The Langmatt Museum and the heiresses expressed their conviction in the press release that they had found a fair solution here too. The painting will remain on display in the museum.
Jenny and Sidney Brown bought the painting in May 1936 at the Galerie Moos in Geneva. It is not clear from the correspondence between Sidney Brown and the gallery whether the provenance was openly communicated. At the time, the painting was owned by Richard Semmel (1875-1950), a Jewish industrialist and art collector.
From 2022 to 2024, the Museum Langmatt investigated the provenance of a total of 13 mostly Impressionist paintings. This so-called provenance research concerned works that Jenny and Sidney Brown bought between 1933 and 1940 to add to their Impressionist collection. In addition to the two paintings classified as problematic, no indications or evidence of Nazi-looted art were found for eleven other works, the museum announced after the research work was completed.
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