An oil and gold-encrusted portrait by Gustav Klimt that was the focus of a battle between the Austrian government and the subject’s niece was purchased for a record-setting amount by a New York museum, an attorney said.
The 1907 portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer — one of the most recognisable of the 20th century — was sold on Sunday by Los Angeles resident and Bloch-Bauer’s niece, Maria Altmann, and her family, said her attorney Steven Thomas.
Thomas refused to disclose the price, but said it eclipsed the prior record of $104,1-million paid at auction for Picasso’s 1905 Boy With a Pipe (The Young Apprentice).
The New York Times, citing experts familiar with the negotiations, reported the portrait sold for $135-million (â,¬106,7-million).
The Klimt painting will now be displayed at the Neue Galerie, a New York museum of German and Austrian art co-founded by cosmetics mogul Ronald Lauder, who Thomas said was instrumental in the deal.
”It was important for the heirs and for my aunt Adele that her work be displayed in a museum,” Altmann said in a statement released by the family.
Altmann (90) was a newly-wed when she watched the Nazis seize power in 1938 and steal the portrait and four other Klimt works from her aunt and uncle’s home.
Since then, the portrait has hung mostly in the Austrian Gallery Belvedere in Vienna, near Klimt’s famous painting The Kiss.
Altmann had figured she had no hope of recovering the family collection until a 1998 law in Austria required museums to return art seized by the Nazis.
She spent several years fighting the Austrian government to recover her family’s collection.
Lawyers in Austria, however, claimed that Altmann’s aunt, who died of meningitis in 1925, had willed the paintings to the government gallery and resisted returning them to the family.
But with the help of attorney Randol Schoenberg, Altmann and her family sued the Austrian government in the United States ‒- a lawsuit that eventually found its way to the US Supreme Court after the Austrian government repeatedly tried to have it dismissed.
The Supreme Court in 2004 ruled in Altmann’s favour and following arbitration, the Austrian government awarded all five paintings to Altmann and her family in January. The collection has been on display at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art since April and will remain there until June 30, Schoenberg said.
Altmann wanted to ensure the art would remain in public view.
”One of the things we always wanted to do was for this to tell the story of what happened to Maria and her family and Jews in the Holocaust,” Schoenberg said.
”Now by having this painting on the wall, it will allow this story to be told and retold.” ‒ Sapa-AP