Jewish heirs demand restitution of Klimt's Beethoven Frieze amid extortion claims

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Jewish heirs demand restitution of Klimt's Beethoven Frieze amid extortion claims
Gustav Klimt, Beethoven Frieze, 1902. Photo: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002. ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.



VIENNA (AFP).- The family of a former Jewish art collector is demanding the restitution of a Gustav Klimt masterpiece that it claims was acquired by Austria after World War II under extortion.

The family's lawyer Marc Weber told the Austria Press Agency (APA) Wednesday that the heirs of Erich Lederer, the previous owner, had filed a restitution request with the Austrian culture ministry.

The ministry confirmed to AFP that it had received the claim.

A famed example of Jugendstil art, the 34-metre-long (112-foot) and two-metre-high Beethoven Frieze -- or fresco -- is one of Vienna's tourism highlights.

Lederer's heirs however allege that the Austrian state forced Lederer to sell the artwork in 1973, in return for being allowed to export other works that had been seized by the Nazis but returned to him after the war, according to the New York Times.

The frieze, which depicts man's path to happiness using allegoric figures, was sold for 15 million Austrian shillings (1.09 million euros, $1.48 million) at the time, far less than its estimated value of 25 million shillings according to auction house Christie's, APA reported.

Changes in Austria's restitution legislation in 2009 have made it possible however for the heirs to now claim back the masterpiece, Weber argued.

"Under the current legislation, it is possible to return artworks that were sold to the state under procedures linked to the export ban," he told the APA.

"Austria can now finally put an end to a continuing injustice after three quarters of a century," he added.

How long the restitution procedure could take is still unclear.

Vienna's Secession art gallery, which has housed the fresco since 1985, noted in a statement Wednesday that the massive artwork was on display in the place for which it had been conceived by Klimt in 1902.

"It is the property of the Austrian republic and the Secession is working on the assumption that it was purchased legally," it added.

The Beethoven Frieze -- so called as it was inspired by the German composer's Ninth Symphony -- is seen as one of the masterpieces by the celebrated Austrian artist Klimt, perhaps best known for his painting "The Kiss."

Thoroughly renovated from 1974 to 1985, the fresco takes up an entire room at the Secession. Conceived as a temporary work however, much of it has been lost.

In 2006, another famed Klimt artwork -- the "Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer" -- had been at the centre of an Austrian restitution battle. It was eventually returned to the heirs of the previous owner.



© 1994-2013 Agence France-Presse










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