Saturday, July 17, 2021

Controversial Max Stern art exhibition gets go-ahead

Heirs of the persecuted Jewish art dealer have withdrawn consent for the September show in Düsseldorf, partly since art looted by the Nazis still hangs in the city.


Max Stern in 1925: His life and legacy is the subject of the exhibition that was cancelled in 2018 due to associations with looted art


An exhibition chronicling the life and legacy of Nazi-persecuted Jewish art dealer, Max Stern, will finally take place — minus the support of scholars and the dealer's own heirs.

Disenfranchised and Deprived: The Art Dealer Max Stern, will kick off September 1 at Düsseldorf's Stadtmuseum three years after it was suddenly cancelled by mayor Thomas Geisel. The decision was made due to concerns about the lack of transparency on potentially looted art formerly owned by Stern that still hangs in public museums in Germany.

The exhibition had been initiated by the Jewish community of Düsseldorf, the Canada-based Max Stern Art Restitution Project, and Susanne Anna, director of the Stadtmuseum.

The unilateral decision to cancel the event until further research was done not only angered donors and partners, it also prompted Stern’s heirs — three universities in Canada and Israel — to withdraw their cooperation. They felt snubbed by the city for not being consulted prior to the cancellation.


Early Renaissance painting "Mary with Child," by Flemish painter Robert Campin: it was the first Nazi looted art to be returned to Max Stern's estate by a German museum (the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart)


Announcing the new exhibition date, current Düsseldorf mayor Stephan Keller gave a full-throated endorsement of the show.

"The history of Max Stern and the Stern Gallery are part of Düsseldorf’s city history," he said. "Stern was a highly respected citizen and an important art dealer in Düsseldorf who became a victim of Nazi terror. To dedicate an exhibition to him and to relate his story in Düsseldorf is of major significance."
Forced to flee fascism

In 1934, a year after the Nazis came to power, art historian Stern took over the art gallery founded by his father Julius Stern in 1913. Located on Königsallee 23-25, it was one of the most respected addresses in the Düsseldorf art trade in the early 20th century.

However due to his Jewish ancestry, Stern was denied admission to the Reich Authority for Fine Arts in 1935, which barred him from continuing his art business. He was eventually forced to liquidate his gallery and sell its contents at the Lempertz auction house in Cologne. He fled to London in 1938, and later settled in Canada.

Stern died childless in 1987, leaving the bulk of his estate to three universities – Concordia and McGill in Montreal, Canada and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. They launched a campaign in 2002 to recover the lost art, thus founding the Max Stern Art Restitution Project.

The foundation has been seeking the restitution of about 400 works in total, and has to date successfully overseen the return of more than 20 works by museums and through the art trade.

Curated from recorded memories


Berlin historian, Dieter Vorsteher, curated the newly conceived exhibition and spent 10 days in Ottawa researching Stern's estate at the National Gallery of Canada.

Using audio tapes of Stern's memories recorded in 1982, in addition to other sources, he traced the successful history of the galleries Stern once ran in Düsseldorf, London and Montreal. He also unearthed previously unknown details about the Stern family's life from 1900 onward.

To this end, the exhibition will feature photographs, films and information panels — and even the Gestapo file on Stern, which the Nazis kept from 1934 to 1942.


This self-portrait of Friedrich Wilhelm von Schadow was returned by the Staatsmuseum Düsseldorf in 2014 to the Max Stern estate. A restitution claim is still pending for another of the artist's works.

Original partners withhold support


However, the Restitution Project and the Canadian curatorial team are not involved in this exhibit, nor are they happy with the new concept.

"After the politically-controlled decision that prompted the cancellation of the original exhibition, Canadian scholars refuse to be associated with an administration that once questioned their academic legitimacy," a project spokesperson told Artnet News in a statement.

It is believed that support was also withdrawn due to ongoing restitution claims over two looted paintings connected to Stern that hang in Düsseldorf museums: Namely "The Artist's Children" (1830) by Friedrich Wilhelm von Schadow, and Heinrich Heimes' "Sunset on the North Sea" (1891).

Curator Dieter Vorsteher said that these issues will be discussed at the exhibition, although he emphasized that provenance research will not be the main focus. "But we will present the problems and the need for evidence on both sides," he said.

Speaking to German broadcaster Deutschlandfunk, provenance researcher Willi Korte questioned what such an exhibition would achieve without the input of crucial experts.

"I can say as someone who has been doing Stern research for 20 years that there are still big gaps in understanding Max Stern's biography," he said. "Many archival documents from the National Socialist era have been lost."

Meanwhile, Düsseldorf mayor Keller announced that in spring 2022 a memorial will be erected on Königsallee to commemorate the history of its former residents who fell victim to Nazi terror. "Max Stern was one of them," he said.

Disenfranchised and Deprived: The Art Dealer Max Stern runs September 1 through January 30, 2022 at Düsseldorf's Stadtmuseum.

GURLITT COLLECTION: GERMANY'S MOST INFAMOUS NAZI-LOOTED ART TROVE
Carl Spitzweg, Playing the Piano, ca. 1840
This drawing by Carl Spitzweg was seized in 1939 from Jewish music publisher Heinri Hinrichsen, who was killed at the Auschwitz death camp in 1942. It was acquired by Nazi art dealer Hildebrand Gurlitt — and later found among the spectacular collection of works hoarded by his son, Cornelius Gurlitt. The work has now been handed over to Christie's auction house at the request of Hinrichsen's heirs.   PHOTOS  1234567891011

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