Chronology
The story of the "Schwabing Art Trove" from 2010.
September 2010
Following a customs inspection on a train from Zurich to Munich, the Bavarian
public prosecutor opened an investigation into Cornelius Gurlitt on suspicion
of tax evasion.
February / March 2012
The Augsburg public prosecutor’s office searched Cornelius Gurlitt’s Munich
apartment and seized works of art found there.
November 3, 2013
The “Schwabinger Kunstfund” (Schwabing Art Trove) was made public through an
article in the German magazine “Focus.” Many works were suspected of being
looted during the Nazi period.
November 2013
The “Schwabing Art Trove Taskforce,” an international team of experts
established by the Federal Republic of Germany and the Free State of Bavaria, began
research on the provenance of the works. During the following weeks, the
confiscated works were published in the Lost Art Database.
February 2014
A court-appointed supervisor and lawyers became Cornelius Gurlitt’s
representatives. They announced that further works of art had been found in
Gurlitt’s house in Salzburg.
April 2014
Cornelius Gurlitt entered into agreement with the Free State of Bavaria and the
Federal Republic of Germany regarding the future administration of works of art
in his possession. He agreed to the “Schwabing Art Trove Taskforce” conducting
research on the collection and to the restitution of all works found to be
looted art to the rightful owners or their heirs.
May 6, 2014
Cornelius Gurlitt died, aged 81, in Munich. The following day, the Kunstmuseum
Bern Foundation learned that Gurlitt had named the museum in his will as sole
beneficiary.
November 21, 2014
Relatives of Cornelius Gurlitt challenged the will.
November 24, 2014
After a six-month period of consideration, the Kunstmuseum Bern Foundation decided
to accept the bequest.
March / April 2015
The Munich “Nachlassgericht” (probate court) ruled that Cornelius Gurlitt’s will
was valid. Some of the family appealed the decision.
May 2015
The restitution of two works from the estate occurred: the heirs of David
Friedmann (1857–1942) received Max Liebermann’s painting Reiter am Strand (Riders
on the Beach, 1901); and the painting Femme à l'éventail (Woman
with a Fan, 1923) by Henri Matisse was restored to the heirs of Paul Rosenberg (1881–1959).
January 14, 2016
The “Schwabing Art Trove Taskforce” presented its final report. The “Gurlitt Provenance
Research Project” at the German Lost Art Foundation assumed responsibility for research.
December 15, 2016
The Munich “Oberlandesgericht” (higher regional court) rejected the appeal
challenging Gurlitt’s will, confirming the Kunstmuseum Bern as rightful
beneficiary.
February 2017
Adolph von Menzel’s drawing Interior of a Gothic Church (1874) was restored to
the heirs of Elsa Helene Cohen (1874–1947).
May 2017
The painting Le Louvre, matin (The Louvre, Morning, 1902) by
Camille Pissarro was restored to the heirs of Max Heilbronn (1902–1998).
November 2017
Kunstmuseum Bern and Bundeskunsthalle in Bonn became the first institutions to
exhibit works of art from the Cornelius Gurlitt Estate.
December 2017
The “Gurlitt Provenance Research Project” was concluded. Starting in January
2018, the German Lost Art Foundation assumed responsibility for the follow-up
project “Reviews, Dokumentation und anlassbezogene Forschungsarbeiten zum
Kunstfund Gurlitt” (reviews, documentation, and research work as required on
the Gurlitt Trove).
April 2018
Kunstmuseum Bern presented the exhibition Gurlitt Status Report: Nazi Art Theft and Its
Consequences.
July 2018
The Kunstmuseum Bern Foundation reached agreement with Paul Cézanne’s heirs
regarding the ownership rights of the painting La Montagne
Sainte-Victoire (Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1897). Cézanne’s heirs recognized
the Kunstmuseum Bern Foundation as rightful owner of the painting. In return,
Kunstmuseum Bern arranged with Musée Granet for it to be regularly exhibited in
Aix-en-Provence.
September 2018
The Gropius Bau in Berlin presented the exhibition Gurlitt Status
Report: An Art Dealer in Nazi Germany.
December 2018
The project “Reviews, Dokumentation und anlassbezogene Forschungsarbeiten zum
Kunstfund Gurlitt” was completed.
January 2019
The painting Portrait of a Seated Young Woman (1850–1855) by Thomas Couture was restored to the heirs of Georges Mandel
(1885–1944). A final research project, “Publikation und Ergebnisdokumentation
zum Kunstfund Gurlitt” (publication and documentation of the results concerning
the Gurlitt Trove), was begun at the German Lost Art Foundation.
July 2019
The painting Quai de Clichy. Temps gris (Clichy Dock. Gray Weather,
1887) by Paul Signac was restored to the heirs of Gaston Prosper Lévy (1893–1977).
In collaboration with the “Forschungsstelle ‘Entartete
Kunst’” (research center for ‘degenerate art’) at Hamburg University,
Kunstmuseum Bern began provenance research into so-called “degenerate art” contained
in the Gurlitt Estate.
September 2019
The Israel Museum in Jerusalem presented the exhibition Fateful Choices:
Art from the Gurlitt Trove.
November 2019
Kunstmuseum Bern sold the painting Marine, Temps d’orage (Ships at Sea in Stormy Weather, 1873) by Édouard Manet to the
National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo. Proceeds from the sale were used to
pay off the debts accrued to date by Kunstmuseum Bern in relation to the
Cornelius Gurlitt bequest.
December 2019
The project “Publikation und Ergebnisdokumentation zum
Kunstfund Gurlitt” at the German Lost Art Foundation was completed.
January 2020
The watercolor Woman in White (1880)
and the oil painting Woman in Profile (1881) by Jean-Louis Forain were restored to the heirs of Armand Isaac Dorville
(1875–1941). Three works from the Gurlitt bequest were ceded to the Free State
of Bavaria to settle inheritance taxes. They are now housed in the Bayerische
Staatsgemäldesammlungen – Pinakothek der Moderne and Staatliche Graphische
Sammlung, Munich.
January 2021
The pencil drawing Das Klavierspiel (Playing the Piano, around
1840) by Carl Spitzweg was restored to the heirs of Henri Hinrichsen (1868–1942).
November 2021
After spending several years researching the Cornelius Gurlitt bequest and
following extensive investigations and considerations in collaboration with
independent international experts, the Kunstmuseum Bern Foundation has reached
several decisions concerning their approach to works of uncertain provenance.
The Kunstmuseum Bern Foundation decided that two works by Otto Dix, Dompteuse (Female
Animal Trainer, 1922) and Dame in der Loge (Lady in a Theatre
Box, 1922), should be transferred jointly to the heirs of Dr Ismar Littmann and
the heirs of Dr Paul Schaefer.
December 10, 2021
Kunstmuseum Bern published the works in the Cornelius Gurlitt bequest in the online
database THE GURLITT ESTATE.
January 2022
Five works of uncertain provenance, which the Kunstmuseum has ceded ownership
of, were transferred to the Federal Republic of Germany. They are now in the
collection of the Federal Arts Administration.
June 2022
The watercolors Dompteuse (1922) and Dame in der Loge (1922) by Otto Dix, in accordance with the agreement
reached with the heirs of Dr. Ismar Littmann and the heirs of Dr. Paul Schaefer,
were auctioned in favor of the heirs.