Nazi-looted Klimt sells for $45.4M
Montreal man to split proceeds with current owner
Last Updated: Wednesday, February 3, 2010 | 11:20 PM ET
CBC News
Workers hang Kirche in Cassone (Church in Cassone) by Gustav Klimt at Sotheby's auction house in London in January. (Stefan Wermuth/Reuters)Gustav Klimt's Kirche in Cassone (Church in Cassone) went for $45.4 million in an auction in London on Wednesday, and part of the proceeds are to go to the Montreal heir to the Nazi-looted work.
Georges Jorisch, born in Vienna in 1928 and now a retired camera shop manager, is to get a share of the proceeds as part of a settlement with the current owner.
Sotheby's estimated the painting could go for $19 million to $29 million Cdn, but lively bidding on the work pushed it above the record price for a Klimt landscape.
A Giacometti sculpture sold for a record price at the same auction. Picasso painting TĂȘte de femme (Jacqueline), was sold for $13.7 million on Tuesday night at Christie's auction house in London, double its pre-sale estimate.
Jorisch, a descendant of a wealthy Jewish family that once owned the Klimt, has agreed to split the auction proceeds with the current owner of the work, who bought it in good faith without knowing its past, Sotheby's said. The current owner wishes to remain anonymous.
The painting in greens, blues and orange once hung in the Vienna home of Jorisch's grandmother. Her brother, Viktor Zuckerkandl, a steel magnate deeply involved in Vienna's art scene, had bought it directly from the artist.
She put the painting in storage during the war, but it disappeared, possibly taken by Nazis, possibly by Soviet soldiers. She was deported to the Lodz ghetto in Poland with Jorisch's mother and never heard of again, while he and his father lived in hiding in Brussels.
Work changed hands
In 1950, Jorisch moved to Montreal and started a new life. His father sought out the paintings in storage, but the crates were empty.
The Klimt didn't resurface until 1962 and it changed hands several times before reappearing at a show in 2002-03.
Jorisch had been in discussions with the current owners for several years trying to reach a settlement, Sotheby's said.
There has been a wave of restitutions of Nazi-looted art in recent years, as international dealers improved their investigations of the provenance of paintings and as countries around the world established laws regarding works stolen during the Holocaust. An online database provides information about works lost during the Holocaust.
Share Tools
Whitney Houston's final song Celebrate debuts by Jessica Wong May. 23, 2012 2:46 PM It seems fitting that Whitney Houston's final release is an upbeat and uplifting duet in which she passes the torch to a younger singer with vocal powerhouse potential. In the high energy song Celebrate, from the upcoming film Sparkle, Houston duets with singer and former American Idol Jordin Sparks.
Top News Headlines
- Quebec Education Minister 'ready' for new student talks
- Michelle Courschene said she hopes to meet with student leaders to break through the tuition crisis impasse, but Quebec's special protest law is not on the table. more »
- Canadian climber describes Everest as 'a morgue'
- A Canadian woman who was climbing Mount Everest the same weekend four others died provided a chilling description of her own perilous journey, saying the mountain seemed "like a morgue." more »
- Shareholders sue Facebook over botched IPO
- Facebook is facing a lawsuit from angry shareholders and multiple probes from regulators over the disappointing handling of its initial public offering last week. more »
- Prince Charles and Camilla get royal Regina treatment
- Neither fog, nor wind, nor rain could keep Regina's royal watchers from coming out to see Prince Charles and Camilla on Wednesday. more »
Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines
- Tom Wesselmann celebrated in new Montreal exhibit
- With Beyond Pop Art: Tom Wesselmann, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts is trying to give the reserved, modest American art icon the attention he deserves. more »
- Mario Bros. creator gets Spain's Asturias Award
- Japan's Shigeru Miyamoto, considered the father of the modern video game, has been awarded Spain's Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities. more »
- David Cronenberg exhibit planned at TIFF
- With Canadian director David Cronenberg drawing attention at Cannes with the upcoming release of Cosmopolis, the TIFF Group is getting ready to celebrate his film career with a new exhibition. more »
- Louis C.K. to headline comedy festival in Toronto
- Comedy star Louis C.K. will headline a new incarnation of Toronto's Just for Laughs festival this fall. more »
Q Blog
Stephen Merchant stands up for himself May. 23, 2012 4:44 PM The comic best known for collaborating with Ricky Gervais on hit TV shows "The Office" and "Extras," talks to Jian about recently returning to his stand-up comedy roots, whether there are taboos in comedy, and more.
CBC Books
The problem with modern motherhood May. 23, 2012 5:26 PM French writer Elisabeth Badinter has written a controversial new book about modern motherhood. It in she argues that parenting methods like attachment parenting undermine women. She explains why to Day 6.
- Mom can't leave Canada with children, or stay either
- Canadian climber describes Everest as 'a morgue'
- Shareholders sue Facebook over botched IPO
- Massive Montreal rally ends with police clashes
- Tories prep back-to-work law for Canadian Pacific Railway
- 'Save me' last words of Mount Everest climber
- Bear drags Winnipeg man from camp outhouse
- Toronto mother, daughter slain in Atlantic City identified
- 15 ways to use a 450-page federal budget bill


