Metropolitan Museum of Art Faces Suit Over "Looted" Picasso Masterpiece
Thursday, March 28, 2024
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Picasso's "The Actor" on Exhibit at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

Laurel Zuckerman, who handles estate matters for Leffmann’s widow Alice, is alternatively seeking more than $100 million of damages. She joins others seeking the return of art taken or sold after Nazis took power in Germany, and as Europe plunged toward war. A Met spokeswoman had no immediate comment. The complaint said Paul Leffmann sold “The Actor” to two art dealers in June 1938 for $12,000 to fund an escape to Switzerland from Benito Mussolini’s regime in Italy, where he and his wife had fled from Germany the prior year.This occurred soon after a state visit by German chancellor Adolf Hitler made clear that Jews in Italy were endangered, and “there was no time left” to act, the complaint said.

 

Met Outside

 

The Met acquired “The Actor” in a 1952 donation, but according to the complaint failed to properly investigate its provenance. It was not until 2011, after decades of incorrect cataloging, that the museum finally acknowledged Leffmann’s ownership and sale, the complaint said. The plaintiff learned about the painting in 2010 and demanded its return. An agreement putting the case on hold expired on September 30, 2016. Lawrence Kaye, a lawyer for Zuckerman, said many European tribunals have ordered the return of artwork sold under duress in Europe during the 1930s and 1940s, though such cases have been less common in the United States.

“We believe the painting is tainted by the history of the Holocaust, and the Leffmanns, given the circumstances under which they sold it, never lost title,” he said in an interview.

 

Picasso Signature

 

The Leffmanns settled in Zurich after World War Two, and died there, the complaint said. The Met website calls “The Actor,” depicting a tall and gaunt male figure, “simple yet haunting,” and “the work with which Picasso ended his obsession with the wretched in favor of the theatrical world of acrobats and saltimbanques.” It attracted attention in January 2010 when an art student accidentally lost her balance and fell into the canvas, causing a six-inch tear. The painting was repaired.

 

 

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