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Plea to National Gallery over ‘looted’ painting

October 24, 2013 21:33
Gustav Klimt’s Portrait of Amalie Zuckerkandl should be returned to its Jewish owners, says a restitution expert (Photo: The National Gallery)

ByRosa Doherty, Rosa Doherty

1 min read

The National Gallery is being urged to investigate the ownership of a painting believed to have been stolen from a Jewish family by the Nazis.

The Portrait of Amalie Zuckerkandl by Gustav Klimt is on loan to the gallery from the Belvedere Gallery in Vienna, as part of the exhibition, Facing the Modern: The Portrait in Vienna 1900.

But Randol Schoenberg, a lawyer who specialises in the restitution of significant artworks, insists the painting was looted.

Mr Schoenberg believes the work belongs to the family of the Jewish sugar baron Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, who was a friend of Amalie’s and commissioned the work.