- Apr 8, 2013
- 16,242
- 14,240
- 136
From time to time, I like to start a thread on something that has nothing to do with contentious partisan politics. Where I think a news story is interesting enough for discussion.
This story involves a fairly wealthy Jewish family, in Nazi Germany in 1938. Desperate for cash to relocate the family to another country, they sold their Picasso painting called "Woman Ironing" from Picasso's blue period, to an art dealer in Munich, for $1500. Equivalent to maybe $20,000 today, it was likely worth at least 50 times that much back then, possibly hundreds of times more. Picasso was not one of those starving artists who was only recognized as a genuis after they died. He was quite famous, and wealthy, long before 1938. Today, this particular work is worth $100-$200 million.
So the family was one of the lucky ones because they had the resources to successfully flee the Nazis. They ultimately recolated the family to Buenos Aires. After the war, the art dealer continued to hold the work in his personal collection, until he died in 1976, and left the painting to New York's Gugenheim Museum. Now their descendants are suing the Gugenheim for either repatriotation of the painting to the family, or its fair market value.
www.cnn.com
A couple of salient legal points. First, under pretty much every legal system, any contract made under duress is invalid and can be undone by the courts. Second, although I'm not sure, there might not be any statute of limitations on undoing a contract which is considered legally invalid from the get go.
So should this family be compensated by Gugenheim, or is it just too late? I mean, in theory any generation of this family could have purused against the art dealer before 1978, or against Gugenheim at any time after that. Did they wait too long? Is it a problem that ownership has changed hands since?
This story involves a fairly wealthy Jewish family, in Nazi Germany in 1938. Desperate for cash to relocate the family to another country, they sold their Picasso painting called "Woman Ironing" from Picasso's blue period, to an art dealer in Munich, for $1500. Equivalent to maybe $20,000 today, it was likely worth at least 50 times that much back then, possibly hundreds of times more. Picasso was not one of those starving artists who was only recognized as a genuis after they died. He was quite famous, and wealthy, long before 1938. Today, this particular work is worth $100-$200 million.
So the family was one of the lucky ones because they had the resources to successfully flee the Nazis. They ultimately recolated the family to Buenos Aires. After the war, the art dealer continued to hold the work in his personal collection, until he died in 1976, and left the painting to New York's Gugenheim Museum. Now their descendants are suing the Gugenheim for either repatriotation of the painting to the family, or its fair market value.

A Jewish family fleeing the Nazis sold a Picasso in 1938. Their heirs want it back
One of Pablo Picasso's Blue Period paintings is at the center of a lawsuit between a Jewish family and New York's Guggenheim Museum.

A couple of salient legal points. First, under pretty much every legal system, any contract made under duress is invalid and can be undone by the courts. Second, although I'm not sure, there might not be any statute of limitations on undoing a contract which is considered legally invalid from the get go.
So should this family be compensated by Gugenheim, or is it just too late? I mean, in theory any generation of this family could have purused against the art dealer before 1978, or against Gugenheim at any time after that. Did they wait too long? Is it a problem that ownership has changed hands since?