Chagall painting stolen by Nazis sells for $7.4m at auction

globaltimes2022-12-06  129

A painting by Marc Chagall, which was among 15 works stolen by Nazis and eventually returned by France to the heirs of t…

A painting by Marc Chagall, which was among 15 works stolen by Nazis and eventually returned by France to the heirs of the affected families, sold for $7.4 million at auction in New York on Tuesday. 

The sale at the Phillips auction house was part of the fall auction season, which sees major industry players sell hundreds of works of art for several billion dollars in a few days in the upscale neighborhoods of Manhattan. 

Chagall's 1911 oil on canvas, The ­Father, was purchased in 1928 by a Polish-­Jewish violin maker, David Cender, who lost his possessions when he was forced to move to the Lodz ghetto.

Deported to Auschwitz, where his wife and daughter were killed, the violin maker survived and moved to France in 1958, where he died in 1966 without regaining possession of the painting.

The work had reappeared in exhibitions and it turned out that it was Chagall himself who had bought it, probably between 1947 and 1953 - without knowing its provenance, according to Phillips and the French Culture Ministry.

After the artist, who was born in the Russian Empire, died in France in 1985, The Father entered the national collections in 1988, and was then assigned to the Pompidou Center and deposited in the Museum of Jewish Art and History in Paris.

The French parliament unanimously adopted a law at the beginning of 2022 to return 15 works of Jewish families looted by the Nazis. The then culture minister, Roselyne Bachelot, had called it a historic "first step," noting that other looted works of art and books were still kept in public collections.

Cender's heirs decided to sell the painting, a common scenario "when a work is restituted so long after it has been stolen," because "you've got multiple heirs and the work itself cannot be split," said Phillips Deputy Chairman Jeremiah Evarts.

Chagall painted the portrait of his father the year he arrived in Paris. He was "electrified by the modernism" of the city at the time and his works from that period are rare, said Evarts.



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