Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war

EUR -
AED 4.276798
AFN 76.973093
ALL 96.541337
AMD 443.660189
ANG 2.0846
AOA 1067.888653
ARS 1669.958677
AUD 1.752514
AWG 2.096182
AZN 1.984351
BAM 1.955625
BBD 2.34549
BDT 142.477215
BGN 1.956439
BHD 0.438161
BIF 3440.791247
BMD 1.164546
BND 1.508565
BOB 8.047278
BRL 6.334667
BSD 1.164496
BTN 104.702605
BWP 15.471612
BYN 3.348
BYR 22825.091832
BZD 2.34209
CAD 1.610159
CDF 2599.265981
CHF 0.936209
CLF 0.027366
CLP 1073.571668
CNY 8.233458
CNH 8.232219
COP 4424.302993
CRC 568.848955
CUC 1.164546
CUP 30.860456
CVE 110.255106
CZK 24.203336
DJF 207.371392
DKK 7.470448
DOP 74.533312
DZD 151.068444
EGP 55.295038
ERN 17.468183
ETB 180.629892
FJD 2.632397
FKP 0.873977
GBP 0.872678
GEL 3.138497
GGP 0.873977
GHS 13.246811
GIP 0.873977
GMD 85.012236
GNF 10119.091982
GTQ 8.9202
GYD 243.638138
HKD 9.065875
HNL 30.671248
HRK 7.535429
HTG 152.446321
HUF 381.994667
IDR 19435.740377
ILS 3.768132
IMP 0.873977
INR 104.760771
IQD 1525.563106
IRR 49041.926882
ISK 149.038983
JEP 0.873977
JMD 186.393274
JOD 0.825709
JPY 180.924237
KES 150.636483
KGS 101.839952
KHR 4662.581612
KMF 491.43861
KPW 1048.137083
KRW 1716.311573
KWD 0.357481
KYD 0.970513
KZT 588.927154
LAK 25252.733992
LBP 104283.942272
LKR 359.197768
LRD 204.961608
LSL 19.736529
LTL 3.438601
LVL 0.704422
LYD 6.330432
MAD 10.755735
MDL 19.814222
MGA 5194.533878
MKD 61.634469
MMK 2445.172268
MNT 4132.506664
MOP 9.338362
MRU 46.438833
MUR 53.651052
MVR 17.938355
MWK 2019.3188
MXN 21.165153
MYR 4.787492
MZN 74.426542
NAD 19.736529
NGN 1688.68458
NIO 42.856154
NOK 11.767853
NPR 167.523968
NZD 2.015483
OMR 0.44694
PAB 1.164595
PEN 3.914449
PGK 4.941557
PHP 68.66747
PKR 326.476804
PLN 4.229804
PYG 8009.281302
QAR 4.244719
RON 5.092096
RSD 117.389466
RUB 89.441974
RWF 1694.347961
SAR 4.370508
SBD 9.584899
SCR 15.747587
SDG 700.4784
SEK 10.946786
SGD 1.508673
SHP 0.873711
SLE 27.603998
SLL 24419.93473
SOS 664.340387
SRD 44.985272
STD 24103.740676
STN 24.497802
SVC 10.190086
SYP 12876.900539
SZL 19.72123
THB 37.119932
TJS 10.684641
TMT 4.087555
TND 3.416093
TOP 2.803946
TRY 49.523506
TTD 7.894292
TWD 36.437508
TZS 2841.64501
UAH 48.888813
UGX 4119.630333
USD 1.164546
UYU 45.545913
UZS 13931.74986
VES 296.437311
VND 30697.419423
VUV 142.156724
WST 3.247609
XAF 655.898144
XAG 0.019964
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.147243
XCG 2.098812
XDR 0.815727
XOF 655.898144
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.802752
ZAR 19.711451
ZMK 10482.311144
ZMW 26.923584
ZWL 374.983176
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.25

    -0.3%

  • GSK

    -0.1600

    48.41

    -0.33%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    16.14

    -0.56%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    90.18

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    -1.0300

    57.01

    -1.81%

  • BP

    -1.4000

    35.83

    -3.91%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    75.41

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    40.32

    -0.55%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.43

    -0.21%

  • RIO

    -0.6700

    73.06

    -0.92%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.79

    +0.29%

  • BCC

    -1.2100

    73.05

    -1.66%

  • VOD

    -0.1630

    12.47

    -1.31%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.55

    +1.4%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.62

    -0.34%

'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war
'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war / Photo: Marcel van Hoorn - AFP

'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war

A man walked into a Viennese gallery one day in the summer of 2023 looking to sell a Gustav Klimt painting. The person who greeted him thought it was a joke, and gently sent him on his way.

Text size:

But when the owner of the W&K gallery was told what had happened, he ran down the street after the man.

Ebi Kohlbacher is an expert on the great Austrian symbolist artist and knew some Klimt paintings had been lost.

He caught up with the man, who showed him a photo of a canvas lost for eight decades -- a portrait of Prince William Nii Nortey Dowuona, an African aristocrat who is known to have met Klimt and posed for him.

It is "one of the rare paintings of a black person in European art created by a great artist", Kohlbacher told AFP.

Experts say Dowuona was the head of a group of the Ga people from near Accra in Ghana who were part of a notorious "human zoo" exhibition of African village life that drew huge crowds in Vienna in 1897.

The painting vanished after World War II, having been owned by a wealthy Jewish Austrian family, the Kleins.

"We had to determine where the work came from without a trace of doubt," Kohlbacher told AFP.

Another expert Alfred Weidinger helped confirm the portrait was genuine and mapped out its history.

The Kleins, who were wine dealers, acquired the painting after Klimt's death in 1918. They fled Austria after the Nazi annexation of in 1938, entrusting the painting to a woman, who later moved to Hungary.

But when the communists took power in Budapest in 1949, the woman ignored all the family's pleas to give it back and the painting vanished from the public eye.

It had four known owners in Hungary between 1988 and 2023, when it was taken back to Austria for expert analysis after Hungary granted an export licence.

- Klimt 'respected' him -

Klimt's work now sells for astronomical sums -- his "Lady with a Fan" sold for $108 million in 2023 -- and Weidinger hailed it as one of the artist's "prominent" works.

The oil painting's floral elements, which later became one of Klimt's characteristic traits, show "a key phase in the evolution of his artistic language", Weidinger said.

"This transition phase is defined in particular by the tension between the meticulously detailed and naturalist figure" of the prince and the "vibrant, almost expressionist rendering of the background", he added.

Kohlbacher said Klimt must have known and respected the prince.

"It is obvious that the painting radiates his admiration," he said.

The prince led a delegation of 120 Africans who travelled through the Austro-Hungarian empire and posed for six months in a show that was visited by up to 10,000 people a day.

The painting marked a turning point in the European perception of Africans, Weidinger said.

Despite problematic colonial prejudices and the obvious "voyeurism" of the show, the Africans "were no longer separated from the public", the expert said.

"The Viennese bourgeoisie took them to cafes and shopping, and showed them the local monuments," he added.

- Enter Viktor Orban's Hungary -

But the tale has another twist thanks to Hungary's new-found passion for the lost African prince.

The last owner of the painting is allowed to sell it under an agreement signed in line with the 1998 Washington Principles for the return of assets seized from Holocaust victims.

He has a confidential deal with the descendants of Ernestine Klein, the original owner who died in 1973.

But Budapest will have none of that as it insists the export licence was not valid, arguing that an item of such value should never have left the country.

While the W&K gallery hopes that Hungary will respect the Washington Principles, the Vienna prosecutor confirmed to AFP he has received a seizure order from Budapest, which wants the "Black Klimt" back.

(P.Werner--BBZ)