
FBI PRESS RELEASE
LOS ANGELES FIELD OFFICE
FBI C 11000 Wilshire Blvd. C Los Angeles, Ca 90024 C
310-996-3341,3342,3343 C Fax: 310-996-3345
For Immediate Release: October 26, 2004
$10 MILLION PICASSO PAINTING STOLEN BY NAZIS DURING
WORLD WAR II SEIZED BY U.S.
A
Pablo Picasso painting called "Femme en Blanc" was seized late last week in
a Chicago residence by Agents from Los Angeles in accordance with acomplaint
for forfeiture filed on October 6 in U.S. District Court for the Central
District of California. The complaint and an arrest warrant issued
on the same day authorized the United States to take custody of the
painting, documented as having been stolen by Nazi troops during the French
occupation in World War II, on the grounds that it had been unlawfully
shipped interstate by a Chicago resident. The government learned today that
the complaint was unsealed on October 22, 2004.
The painting, "Femme en Blanc" or "Woman in White," and also known as "Femme
Assise" or "Seated Woman," was created by Picasso circa 1922. The complaint
details an investigation conducted by the Art Loss Register in London that
documented the paintingıs history. The paintingıs first owner, Carlota
Landsberg, bought the painting in 1926 or 1927 from an art dealer in Berlin
who had purchased it from Picasso. In approximately 1938 or 1939, Landsberg
sent the painting to Paris art dealer J.K. Thannhauser for safekeeping
during the war. Thannhauser later fled Paris to escape persecution during
the German occupation of France. In 1940, the contents of his Paris home,
including the painting, were looted by the Nazis.
The Art Loss Registerıs investigation showed that Thannhauser immigrated to
the United States and resided in New York. In 1958, Thannhauser sent a etter
to Landsberg describing the theft of the painting and donated most of his
art collection to the Guggenheim Museum before his death in 1976. Despite
attempts, the painting was never located by Thannhauser, Landsberg or by the
French and German governments. Restitution claims researched by the Art Loss
Register revealed that the German government had recognized Mrs.
Landdsbergıs claim for loss of the painting and agreed to preserve her right
to recover the painting if it were ever to be found. Landsberg eventually
relocated to New York and died in 1994. Landsbergıs sole heir, Thomas
Bennigson, resides in the Bay Area.
According to the complaint, documents reveal the painting was next known to
be in the possession of Maurice Covo, owner and manager of Galerie Renou &
Poyet in Paris in 1975. Covo said he had received the painting from a
collector who had obtained it from a dealer who was investigated by a
postwar tribunal on charges of benefiting from sales to the Nazis. Covo sold
the painting in 1975 to a Paris art gallery for 630,000 French francs. The
Paris gallery then sold the painting to Chicago residents, Marilynn Alsdorf
and her husband James (now deceased). The painting was not publicly
displayed and its whereabouts have generally remained unknown until the fall
of 2001, when the painting was shown at a small exhibition held at an art
gallery in Los Angeles. Shortly after the exhibit, the Los Angeles gallery
attempted to sell the painting on behalf of Mrs. Alsdorf. The painting was
then shipped to Geneva, Switzerland, to be viewed by a Paris art dealer
acting as an advisor to an unidentified European collector.
As part of due diligence, the dealer contacted the Art Loss Register in
London, England, which serves as a clearinghouse of historical information
concerning Nazi-looted paintings and assists in negotiating the resolution
of disputes concerning the ownership of art. The Art Loss Register
investigated the provenance of the painting in European archives and
discovered the paintingıs extensive documented history in Europe and the
U.S. as having been stolen by the Nazis. The Art Loss Register notified all
parties with an interest in the painting of their findings, to include Mrs.
Alsdorf in Chicago, Thomas Bennigson in California and their respective
attorneys.
In December 2002, according to the complaint, Mrs. Alsdorf attempted to
transport the painting from the gallery in Los Angeles to her designated
warehouse in Chicago. Before Bennigson discovered the painting was on its
way to Chicago, he filed an action against Mrs Alsdorf in Los Angeles
Superior Court to recover the painting, claiming it had been taken from him
unlawfully. A temporary restraining order hearing was scheduled for December
20, 2002 in Los Angeles. On that date, before the scheduled hearing time,
the painting was transported from Los Angeles to Chicago at the request of
Mrs. Alsdorf. The painting was, therefore, then subject to forfeiture to the
United States as property traceable to unlawful activity in that it was
transported in interstate commerce with knowledge that it was stolen.
FBI Agents and U.S. Marshals from Los Angeles seized the painting on October
21 at the Alsdorf residence in Chicago where it will remain pending a civil
forfeiture proceeding. All interested parties will be granted an appearance
to show cause why forfeiture should not be decreed.
The investigation and research of the painting was conducted by the Art Loss
Register in London, England, and the FBI. The seizure of the painting was
carried out by the FBI and the United States Marshals Service in Los
Angeles. The governmentıs forfeiture proceedings will be prosecuted by the
United States Attorneyıs Office in Los Angeles.
Back to BHBA
CFTA