A French Court Has Ordered Christie’s to Restitute an Adriaen Van Der Werff Painting That Was Stolen During World War II
A Nazi-looted painting by the Dutch Old Master Adriaen van der Werff looks to be on its way back to the heirs of its World War II-era owner after a French court ordered Christie’s London to restitute the (1707), which it sold in 2005 for £60,000 ($115,185).
Before the Nazis came to power, the oil-on-panel painting belonged to art collector Lionel Hauser, a banker in Paris—and cousin to Marcel Proust. In 1945, Hauser reported that the Nazis had seized his 40-work art collection, including , from his home on October 23, 1942.
The French government included photographs of the stolen artwork in the Répertoire des biens spoliés listing property looted during the war, but that somehow slipped by Christie’s ahead of the 2005 sale, which did not include a provenance history for the painting.
Fast forward to 2017, when the current owner, an anonymous British collector, approached Christie’s about putting the painting up for sale yet again. This time, the auction house traced the work to Hauser, and a representative from Christie’s legal department reached out to his heirs to inform them of the looted work’s whereabouts.
“Christie’s is pleased to have identified concern over this painting’s provenance and to have informed the Hauser heirs, allowing them the possibility to claim the work,” a representative of the auction house told Artnet News in an email. “Christie’s, facilitating discussions between the parties, had offered to restitute the painting to the heirs of the Hauser Family and regrets that this was not possible by earlier amicable resolution.”
Christie’s had offered to split the proceeds of the work’s sale—minus its fees—between the heirs and the current owner, estimating its value at £30,000 to £50,000 ($37,000 to $61,000) in 2019. But the auction house refused to return the work outright, citing the statute of limitations under U.K. law, since more than six years had passed since the 2005 sale. Read More…