Monet picture found in collector Cornelius Gurlitt's suitcase - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:54 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Monet picture found in collector Cornelius Gurlitt's suitcase

A landscape by Claude Monet has been found in a suitcase the late German collector Cornelius Gurlitt had with him during a hospital stay, the latest piece to emerge from his long-hidden art trove.
German officials seized 1,500 artworks from the Munich residence of Cornelius Gurlitt in November, including paintings by Henri Matisse, Emil Nolde and Max Liebermann. A suitcase left in the hospital where Gurlitt had been staying before his death in May contained a Monet. (Lennart Preiss/Getty Images)

A landscape by Claude Monet has been found in a suitcase the late German collector Cornelius Gurlitt had with him during a hospital stay, the latest piece to emerge from his long-hidden art trove.

The suitcase was left at the hospital for unknown reasons, and was handed over earlier this week to the court-appointed administrator of Gurlitt's estate, the task force investigating the pieces' origin said Friday.

The latest find comes after officials in July reported finding a few more works at Gurlitt's Munich apartment, including a sculpture apparently by Edgar Degas.

Like the Monet, they weren't among 1,280 pieces authorities seized from the apartment in 2012 while investigating a tax case, a collection that included works by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Marc Chagall. It wasn't immediately clear where the Monet was kept and why it wasn't seized.

The trove of seized artworks even included unknown paintings by artists such as Henri Matisse, Marc Chagall and these two works by German artist Otto Dix. (Michael Dalder/Reuters)

The task force said it will check whether the Monet was stolen by the Nazis, as it is doing with many other works in Gurlitt's collection.

It said it appears after initial examination that the light-blue landscape, painted on paper, may have been produced around 1864. The subject appears very similar to the French artist's View of Sainte-Adresse.

Collection designated for Swiss museum

Gurlitt died at home in May after spending weeks in a hospital.

News of the art trove's seizure emerged only in November. Authorities had discovered the works while investigating Gurlitt for suspected import tax evasion. He inherited the collection from his father Hildebrand, an art dealer who traded in works confiscated by the Nazis.

Gurlitt designated Switzerland's Kunstmuseum Bern as sole heir to his collection. The museum is considering whether to accept the bequest.

Shortly before he died, Gurlitt reached a deal with the German government to check whether hundreds of the works had been looted from Jewish owners by the Nazis.