RestitutionOctober 19, 2018

The Solomon Guggenheim Foundation restitutes Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's Artillerymen to heirs of Alfred Flechteim

The painting by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Artillerymen, 1915 will be returned to the heirs of one its previous owner's German Jewish art dealer Alfred Flechtheim. The announcement was made by The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation after reaching an agreement for the restitution of the artwork, following a two-year research conducted by the Museum in collaboration with the Holocaust Claims Processing Office of New York State's Department of Financial Services, and the attorneys representing Flechtheim heirs Dr. Michael R. Hulton of San Francisco and Mrs. Penny R. Hulton of Potters Bar, UK. The research shows that after Flechtheim fled Germany in 1933, moving to Switzerland, Paris and finally London, Artillerymen was in the custody of his niece Rosi Hulisch (Dr. Hulton's aunt), who remained in Nazi Germany until her death by suicide in 1942 on the eve of her deportation to a concentration camp. In 1938, the painting was acquired in Germany by Kurt Feldhäusser, a member of the Nazi party. By that time, Flechtheim's sole designated heir, nephew Henry Alfred Hulton, was living as a refugee in London. Research also confirms that both before and after Flechtheim's death the Nazis singled him out as a target of particularly virulent anti-Semitic propaganda. Feldhäusser was killed in Germany in 1945 and his art collection was left to his mother, who consigned it to the Weyhe Gallery in New York in 1949. Mr. and Mrs. Morton D. May of St. Louis, Missouri purchased Artillerymen in 1952 and donated it to The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York in 1956. In 1988, the painting was transferred by MoMA to the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation in exchange for other works. The Guggenheim relied on Donald E. Gordon's catalogue raisonné of the work of Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1968), which incorrectly stated that before Artillerymen had entered Feldhäusser's collection, the painting had been owned by German collector Hermann Lange. New research shows that the painting was owned at that time by Flechtheim and not Lange. Richard Armstrong, Director, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation, said, "After an extensive examination of the extraordinary circumstances surrounding this work and in keeping with the 1998 Washington Declaration on Holocaust Era Assets and the guidelines of the American Association of Museum Directors, we are satisfied that it will be restituted to the Hultons."
The Solomon Guggenheim Foundation restitutes Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's Artillerymen to heirs of Alfred Flechteim
The Solomon Guggenheim Foundation restitutes Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's Artillerymen to heirs of Alfred Flechteim | artnexus