Category: Allgemein

Event in NY: ART RESTITUTION – Fair and Just Solutions?

presents

ART RESTITUTION
Fair and Just Solutions?

Thursday, May 23, 2019 • 6:30 PM

—Free Admission & Open to the Public—

New York City Bar Association
42 West 44th Street, New York, NY 10003

Register Now!

This program brings together Hon. John M. Walker Jr. as panel moderator with prominent attorneys in the field of art restitution to discuss the direction of court decisions. We are also pleased to have the Executive Director of the International Foundation for Art Research and the International Director of Restitution at Christie’s look back to the Nazi stolen art era and forward on the broadening of the definition of looted and stolen art.

FEATURING

Hon. John M. Walker, Jr., Panel Moderator
U.S. Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

Raymond J. Dowd, Esq.
Partner, Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP

Monica Dugot
International Director of Restitution, Christie’s

Dr. Sharon Flescher
Executive Director, International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR)

Lawrence M. Kaye, Esq.
Partner, Herrick Feinstein LLP

William Pearlstein, Esq.
Partner, Pearlstein McCullough & Lederman LLP

Press Release regarding the JUST Act

The Leon Fischer Trust for the Life and Work of Fritz Grünbaum calls on the U.S. State Department to report the lack of progress made by Austria and Germany on returning Holocaust-era assets taken from Nazi persecutees under the JUST ACT.

New York, November 21st, 2018 – The Leon Fischer Trust for the Life and Work of Fritz Grünbaum, represented by Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP, calls upon the United States Department of State, as required by the authority of the JUST (Justice for Uncompensated Survivors Today) Act, signed into law by President Trump on May 9, 2018, to report to Congress the lack of progress the nations of Austria and Germany have made on returning Holocaust-era assets taken from Nazi persecutees.

The countries of Austria and Germany are in violation of The Washington Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art, which were endorsed by 44 countries and many U.S. museums at the 1998 Washington Conference on Holocaust-era Assets. The Principles commit signatories to publicizing looted art, resolving the merits of Nazi-era ownership disputes and encouraging owners to come forward by providing legal mechanisms or alternative dispute resolution to achieve “just and fair solutions.”

Austria’s continued possession of Fritz Grünbaum’s Dead City III, by the artist Egon Schiele, and Austria’s refusal to agree to a legal or alternative dispute resolution should be spotlighted in the State Department’s report to Congress. In the wake of the Washington Conference, Austria decided not to endorse the principle and instead to pass a restitution law that fails to provide even the most fundamental due process rights by denying claimants the basic right to participate as parties and by failing to provide review by an independent judiciary.

Germany for its part took the wonderful step of creating the publicly-available “lostart.de” database to permit Holocaust victims and their descendants from around the world to report claims for free.  Incredibly, the German Lost Art Foundation recently removed not only Dead City III but also 62 other claims by the Fischer-Grünbaum Trust and Family of Fritz Grünbaum, who was a victim of the Dachau Concentration Camp, at the request of art dealers.

The Leon Fischer Trust for the Life and Work of Fritz Grünbaum is hopeful that the efforts of the State Department and the JUST Act will help finally to liberate works of art that have been called “the last prisoners of World War II”.

 The Fischer-Grünbaum Trust is represented by Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP. Partner Raymond Dowd will be attending the upcoming 20th anniversary conference in Berlin.

 

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For more Information, contact Kieren Weisert, PR Associate at (606) 304-9278 or email Mr. Weisert at kw@insidetrackpr.com

Looted art remains in US Museum / Naziraubkunst bleibt in US Museum

In the end of July 2018, the final court decision was issued according to which two Cranach paintings stolen by Nazis for the Hermann-Göring-Collection remain in the American Norton Simon Museum and do not have to be returned to the heirs of the Dutch Goudstikker family.

In his lecture from 2015, Ray Dowd – the lawyer of Fritz Grünbaum’s heirs – deals with the problems that victims´ families can expect when making demands on American museums.


Ende Juli 2018 erging die finale Gerichtsentscheidung, wonach – von Nazis für die Sammlung Göring geraubte –  zwei Cranach Bilder im amerikanischen Norton Simon Museum verbleiben und nicht an die Erben der holländischen Familie Goudstikker restituiert werden müssen.

In seinem Vortrag aus dem Jahre 2015 beschäftigt sich Ray Dowd – der Anwalt der Erben von Fritz Grünbaum – mit den zu erwartenden Problemen der Opferfamilien bei Forderungen an amerikanischen Museen.