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Four works by world's most expensive artist to be sold (INDEPENDENT ) Updated: 2006-08-08 11:32 The remaining four works of a
group of five paintings by Gustav Klimt looted by the Nazis are about to be sold
after the first became the world's most expensive work earlier this
summer.
All five originally belonged to Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, a wealthy
industrialist, and his wife, Adele.
Adele - who may have been the
artist's lover, was the only one of Klimt's models to be painted
twice.
The first of the portraits, dating from 1907, was sold for ?3m
($222m) in June to the Neue Galerie, a New York museum founded by the
cosmetics-maker Ronald Lauder.
Now another, less formal version of the
1912 portrait is to be sold, as will two landscapes and a view of an apple
tree.
Maria Altmann, 90, the Bloch-Bauers' niece who led the restitution
claim, said: "Since recovering the paintings, my family and I have focused our
efforts on arranging exhibitions in LA and New York in order to share these
beautiful works and their powerful story.
"Our family has now made the
decision to part with them and has entrusted them to Christie's."
Ms
Altmann and her fellow heirs fought a long battle in the courts of Austria and
the United States to reclaim the works that had hung in Austrian public
galleries since the war.
The root of the Austrian state's claims to the
works was Adele Bloch-Bauer's will.
Before her death from meningitis in
1925, she had indicated that the Klimts should be donated to the Austrian State
Gallery.
But her widowed husband was forced to flee their home in 1938
when the Nazis took over and the works were confiscated.
In 1945, he
named his nephews and nieces as the inheritors of his estate. For years, there
seemed little likelihood of them claiming their inheritance.
But in 1998,
amid international concern over the fate of Nazi-looted art, Austria introduced
a restitution law.
The family was initially unsuccessful in legal action
in Austria but brought its case to the US Supreme Court.
That ruled in
2004 that American courts had jurisdiction to decide their case and that the
heirs could sue Austria in the US.
The parties submitted the case to
binding arbitration in Austria and in January this year, a panel unanimously
determined that the paintings should be returned to the heirs.
The
decision was greeted with dismay in Austria with a public clamour for the works
to be saved, but its government decided it could not afford to buy the works
from the family, which appears to have decided the works are too impossibly
valuable to keep.
Maria Altmann, who lives in California, said: "I can't
have it in my house. There is no security for this. I would be always worried
about being hit over the head."
The remaining four works by Klimt, an
Austrian symbolist painter who lived from 1862 to 1918, will now be
valued.
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