Originally published Thursday, October 30, 2008 at 12:35 PM
Museum returns painting found to be Nazi loot
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts has sent a painting by cubist Fernand Leger back to the heirs of a Jewish art collector in France, after concluding it had been stolen by the Nazis during World War II.
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts has sent a painting by cubist Fernand Leger back to the heirs of a Jewish art collector in France, after concluding it had been stolen by the Nazis during World War II.
The museum had owned the 1911 Leger painting "Smoke Over Rooftops" since 1961. But after a decade of detective work, the institute decided to return it to the heirs of noted Parisian collector Alphonse Kann, who died in 1948.
"Having researched this to the end of the road, we decided we had to return the painting; it was the right thing to do," Kaywin Feldman, director of the institute, told the Star Tribune for a story published Thursday.
In 1997, the museum received a letter claiming the painting had been part of Kann's collection that was confiscated by the Nazis after he fled Paris for London. Kann got much of his art back after the war, but not the Leger, now worth about $2.8 million.
The Leger was bequeathed to the institute in 1961 by Minneapolis businessman Putnam Dana McMillan, who had bought it from the Buchholz Gallery in New York in 1951.
It took years for the institute to determine if the claim was legitimate. "Smoke Over Rooftops" was a theme Leger painted at least six times, so it wasn't clear at first if it was the same one Kann had owned.
The research took years of scrutiny of Nazi-era documents, gallery and auction records in four countries.
It's not an unusual dilemma for a museum. According to the Association of Art Museum Directors, U.S. museums identified in their collections 22 works between 1998 and July 2006 that had been stolen by the Nazis. The art was either returned to heirs or settlements were reached, in some cases allowing the art to remain at the museums.
Investigators established that after Kann fled Paris, the Nazis confiscated the bulk of his collection, a trove so extensive that the Nazis' inventory of it ran to 60 typed pages. A Paris art dealer, Galerie Leiris, bought the Leger at an auction in 1942 and later sold it to Buchholz Gallery.
---
Minneapolis Institute of Arts: http://www.artsmia.org
Association of Art Museum Directors: http://www.aamd.org
---
Information from: Star Tribune, http://www.startribune.com
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Seattle Symphony looks to 'Final Fantasy' to help score points with young audiences
NEW - 10:57 AM
Movie review: "Brüno" struts his stuff to hilariously expose intolerance
Seattle's Central District Forum lineup announced
UPDATE - 02:06 PM
Theater review | Quirks, physicality in wrenching tragedy 'Othello'
Michael Jackson's final resting place a mystery

Gen. David Petraeus: Iraq and Afghanistan Wars
Watch highlights of General David Petraeus discussing the Iraq and Afghanistan War at the Global Leadership Series sponsored by the World Affairs Council.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
shopping

events for Thursday, Jul. 9th
- IKEA Summer Sale
- Alhambra July Sale
- Kibbn Storewide Summer Sale
- Market Street Shoes and Market Street...
editors' picks
More shopping guides- Key lawmakers warn of Boeing no-strike ultimatum
- Hemmed-in Ballard house to rise above
- Seattle-area homebuilder losing projects to foreclosure
- UW Football | Tailbacks David Freeman, Brandon Johnson ineligible
- Health-plan costs soar for individuals
- Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
- Drunken man shocks Spain with his generosity
- Experts may never be able to pin cyber attack on N. Korea
- Nickels gives City Light chief $40,000 bonus
- Coffee City | New "sexpresso" stand coming to Ballard
- Mass. files lawsuit against federal marriage law
905 - Key lawmakers warn of Boeing no-strike ultimatum
600 - Health-plan costs soar for individuals
315 - Mariners game thread, July 8
186 - Judges strike broad ban on Washington's Plan B rules
157 - Teen charged in pit bull attacks ordered held after pleading not guilty
137 - Sheriff's Office: Man not armed when fatally shot by deputy
119 - Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
75 - Wednesday night notes
59 - Pay parking in West Seattle?
59
- Hemmed-in Ballard house to rise above
- Key lawmakers warn of Boeing no-strike ultimatum
- Seattle-area homebuilder losing projects to foreclosure
- Health-plan costs soar for individuals
- Rick Steves' Europe | Beware of new and classic travel scams
- Happy Hour | Ruth's Chris has super rib-eye sliders and quality cocktails
- All You Can Eat | "Top Chef": Seattle chefs tapped for Bravo knife fight in Vegas!
- Trees vs. houses: Narrow, leafy street is last chance for two Madrona homes waiting to be moved
- Grab the kids and hop on Amtrak for a stress-free getaway to Portland
- All You Can Eat | Oceanaire files bankruptcy, shutters Seattle, former chefs weigh in
