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Several of Austrian Expressionist Egon Schiele’s other works have already been returned by museums and private owners, including a drawing that was in the collection of billionaire Ronald Lauder.
It's one of the longest running holocaust restitution cases: works by painter Egon Schiele were handed back to its rightful heirs today in New York. The original owner was murdered by the Nazis.
The pieces are by Austrian artist Egon Schiele, and they were given back by various museums and private collectors after a decadeslong legal battle. Here's NPR's Jasmine Garsd. JASMINE GARSD ...
“Russian War Prisoner” by Egon Schiele. The Art Institute claims it ... being looted by British troops in 1897, now flooding back. The Smithsonian returned 29 bronzes; the British Museum ...
Several museums and collectors have surrendered artworks by Egon Schiele to investigators who ... Ronald Lauder. He gave back a watercolor, “I Love Antithesis,” a self-portrait of the artist ...
Reif and other heirs and co-executors had been called to the ceremony to receive seven pieces by the 20th-century Austrian expressionist Egon Schiele that were part of Grünbaum’s vast art ...
Two other pieces were voluntarily given back by New York City’s Museum ... shows artwork by the Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele (Manhattan District Attorney's Office via AP ...
7 Egon Schiele portraits to be returned to heirs of Jewish cabaret star murdered in the ... heirs to ‘Cabaret’ inspiration Fritz Grünbaum take back 7 Egon Schiele works stolen by the Nazis.
I just couldn’t imagine her ever getting back on her feet after that trauma. Egon Schiele’s story stops in 1918. But I couldn’t stop thinking about this woman who was living in the aftermath.
Back at home in Vienna, from March 28 to July 13, the Leopold will present “Changing Times. Egon Schiele’s Last Years: 1914-1918.” And at this year’s edition of TEFAF Maastricht in the ...
"The Woman in a Black Pinafore" by Egon Schiele (1911). Property from the ... Grünbaum was arrested and sent to Dachau, Buchenwald and back to Dachau where he died in January 1941.
Jackie Hajdenberg They had seen the pictures before, in the collections of the museums that owned them until earlier this year. But the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a Viennese cabaret performer killed in ...