The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern has agreed to accept a trove of artworks looted from Jews by the Nazis and find their rightful owners. Ruben Sprich / Reuters
The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern has agreed to accept a trove of artworks looted from Jews by the Nazis and find their rightful owners. Ruben Sprich / Reuters
The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern has agreed to accept a trove of artworks looted from Jews by the Nazis and find their rightful owners. Ruben Sprich / Reuters
The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern has agreed to accept a trove of artworks looted from Jews by the Nazis and find their rightful owners. Ruben Sprich / Reuters

Swiss museum to take Nazi art haul


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BERLIN // A Swiss museum said on Monday it would accept a German recluse’s bequest of a spectacular trove of more than 1,000 artworks hoarded during the Nazi era.

The works include priceless paintings and sketches by Picasso, Monet, Chagall and other masters that were discovered by chance in 2012 in the Munich flat of Cornelius Gurlitt.

The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern pledged to work with German authorities to ensure that “all looted art in the collection is returned” to its rightful owners.

About 500 works of dubious provenance will remain in Germany so a government-appointed task force can continue its research in identifying the heirs.

Gurlitt, who died last May aged 81, was the son of an art dealer tasked by Adolf Hitler to help plunder great works from museums and Jewish collectors, many of whom perished in Nazi gas chambers.

In the course of a routine tax inquiry, 1,280 works were unearthed in Gurlitt’s cluttered Munich home.

More than 300 other works were discovered in a ramshackle house Gurlitt owned in Salzburg.

Although he was never charged with a crime, the German authorities confiscated all of the Munich pieces and stored them in a secret location.

Gurlitt struck an accord with the German government shortly before his death to help track down the paintings’ rightful owners.

But his anger over his treatment reportedly led him to stipulate in his will that the collection should go not to a German museum but to the Swiss institution.

After six months of negotiations, the German culture minister Monika Gruetters called the accord reached with the Bern museum “a milestone in coming to terms with our history” under the Third Reich.

She said the German government was committed to returning the looted works to Jewish descendants “as soon as possible, with no ifs, ands or buts”.

But “we’re at the beginning, not the end, of a long road,” she admitted.

Ms Gruetters said that some of the works staying in Germany with doubtful provenance would be displayed in exhibitions to encourage heirs to come forward and stake claims.

And under the terms of the agreement, nearly 480 avant-garde works deemed by the Nazis to be “degenerate art” not befitting the ideals of the Third Reich would be loaned by Bern primarily to institutions from which they were taken in the 1930s.

Had the Swiss museum turned down the offer, the pieces would have been divided up among relatives of Gurlitt, who never married and had no children.

Ronald Lauder, the head of the World Jewish Congresstold German news weekly Der Spiegel this month that the Swiss museum should not accept the inheritance, saying it “would open a Pandora’s Box and cause an avalanche of lawsuits”.

Indeed one of Gurlitt’s cousins, 86-year-old Uta Werner, said on Friday she was contesting Gurlitt’s fitness of mind when he wrote the will naming the Bern museum as his sole heir.

This could return the case to legal limbo, with ageing Jewish descendants left to fight for their claims in German courts for years to come.

After the discovery of the Gurlitt trove came to light in a magazine article last year, Jewish groups and the US and Israeli governments put pressure on Germany to establish a task force to investigate the works’ provenance.

In the case of a Matisse painting titled Seated Woman, believed to be worth about Dh74 million, the panel determined in June that the work was “Nazi loot” stolen from Paris art collector Paul Rosenberg.

Ms Gruetters said that three such works including the Matisse would be returned “without delay” to the heirs.

* Agence France-Presse