7 artworks to be returned to heirs of Jewish cabaret star murdered in the Holocaust

Egon Schiele portraits valued at $9.5 million surrendered by New York’s Museum of Modern Art and others after years of legal battles

  • Works by Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele are on display at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, September 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Bobby Caina Calvan)
    Works by Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele are on display at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, September 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Bobby Caina Calvan)
  • This image provided by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office shows artwork by the Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele. On Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, the art plundered by the Nazis was returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a well-known cabaret performer who was arrested in 1938 and later died in the Dachau concentration camp. The Manhattan District Attorney's Office secured the return of the artworks from prominent museums earlier this year, including one piece from the Museum of Modern Art. Combined, the pieces are valued at more than $9.5 million. (Manhattan District Attorney's Office via AP)
    This image provided by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office shows artwork by the Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele. On Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, the art plundered by the Nazis was returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a well-known cabaret performer who was arrested in 1938 and later died in the Dachau concentration camp. The Manhattan District Attorney's Office secured the return of the artworks from prominent museums earlier this year, including one piece from the Museum of Modern Art. Combined, the pieces are valued at more than $9.5 million. (Manhattan District Attorney's Office via AP)
  • This image provided by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office shows artwork by the Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele. On Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, the art plundered by the Nazis was returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a well-known cabaret performer who was arrested in 1938 and later died in the Dachau concentration camp. The Manhattan District Attorney's Office secured the return of the artworks from prominent museums earlier this year, including one piece from the Museum of Modern Art. Combined, the pieces are valued at more than $9.5 million. (Manhattan District Attorney's Office via AP)
    This image provided by the Manhattan District Attorney's Office shows artwork by the Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele. On Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023, the art plundered by the Nazis was returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a well-known cabaret performer who was arrested in 1938 and later died in the Dachau concentration camp. The Manhattan District Attorney's Office secured the return of the artworks from prominent museums earlier this year, including one piece from the Museum of Modern Art. Combined, the pieces are valued at more than $9.5 million. (Manhattan District Attorney's Office via AP)
  • Works of art by Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele on display at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, September 20, 2023, during a ceremony returning the pieces to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum. (AP/Bobby Caina Calvan)
    Works of art by Austrian expressionist artist Egon Schiele on display at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, September 20, 2023, during a ceremony returning the pieces to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum. (AP/Bobby Caina Calvan)

JTA — Seven works by artist Egon Schiele will be returned to the heirs of a Jewish cabaret performer who had owned the pieces before being murdered in the Holocaust, New York authorities announced on Wednesday.

The works, most of them portraits of Schiele himself or his wife, were part of a massive art collection owned by the Viennese performer Fritz Grünbaum and are estimated to be worth a total of approximately $9.5 million.

Grünbaum’s collection also included works by renowned artists Albrecht Dürer, Auguste Rodin and Camille Pissarro, along with a total of 81 pieces by Schiele, an Austrian expressionist painter active in the early 20th century.

Before being seized by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office earlier this year, the works were in the possession of several prestigious institutions, including New York City’s Museum of Modern Art, Morgan Library, Vally Sabarsky Trust and Ronald Lauder Collection, as well as the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. All seven portraits were voluntarily surrendered by the institutions after they were shown evidence that the works were stolen by the Nazis.

The restitution announcement was made by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and Ivan J. Arvelo, a special agent in charge at a branch of the US Department of Homeland Security.

The effort by Timothy Reif and David Frankel — heirs and co-executors of the Grünbaum estate — to reacquire the Schiele paintings has lasted more than 25 years and has been marked by legal battles due both to statutes of limitations and disputed claims. One claim alleged that the paintings were never stolen, and were instead in the custody of a relative of the Grünbaum family for the duration of the war, until they were sold to art collectors.

Fritz Grünbaum (Thomas Staedeli / Österreichisches Theatermuseum, via Wikipedia)

Last week, three other Schiele works believed to have come from the Grünbaum collection were seized by Bragg’s office from the Art Institute of Chicago, the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh and the Allen Memorial Art Museum at Oberlin College in Ohio.

Schiele’s work was popular among Jewish art collectors, and was considered “degenerate” art, along with a wide range of other modernist works, by the Nazis.

In October 2022, two of Schiele’s paintings, previously in Grünbaum’s collection, were auctioned for charity by Grünbaum’s descendants through Christie’s to support up-and-coming performing artists from underrepresented backgrounds.

As a cabaret artist, Grünbaum performed as a master of ceremonies and wrote operettas and songs. He was also known for his political activity: In 1910, when an Austrian officer made antisemitic remarks, Grünbaum slapped him and was challenged to a duel in which he was injured. In the 1930s, Grünbaum became a vocal critic of the Nazis both in his performances and in a weekly column for a Viennese daily newspaper.

In 1938, Grünbaum and his wife Elisabeth were arrested by the Nazis and he was forced to sign a document giving her power of attorney. Elisabeth was then forced to sign a paper claiming she voluntarily turned over her husband’s art collection to the Nazis.

Grünbaum gave his last performance at the Dachau concentration camp’s infirmary on December 31, 1940. He died of tuberculosis two weeks later. Elisabeth is believed to have died at the Maly Trostenets concentration camp near Minsk in 1942.

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