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Artist to pull works from Swiss museum over Nazi-era collection

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Swiss artist Miriam Cahn presents her exhibition 'Todo es igualmente importante’ (Everything is equally important) (Photo by Quim Llenas/Getty Images)
Swiss artist Miriam Cahn presents her exhibition 'Todo es igualmente importante’ (Everything is equally important) (Photo by Quim Llenas/Getty Images)
  • Artist Miriam Cahn wrote a letter saying she no longer wanted her work displayed at Zurich's Kunsthaus museum.
  • The controversy centres on the art collection that industrialist Emil Buhrle built during World War II. 
  • Buhrle amassed a fortune selling weapons to both the Nazis and the Allies. With this wealth he bought around 600 artworks.


A Jewish artist plans to pull her paintings from one of Switzerland's largest art museums over its decision to permanently house a controversial Nazi-era collection, media reported Wednesday.

Swiss artist Miriam Cahn wrote a letter, published Wednesday by the Jewish weekly Tachles, saying she no longer wanted her work displayed at Zurich's Kunsthaus museum.

"I don't want to be represented by this Kunsthaus and want to withdraw all of my paintings from it," she wrote.

The controversy centres on one of Europe's most prestigious private art collections, which was acquired by industrialist Emil Buhrle during World War II, and which has been on display at Kunsthaus since October.

The decision by one of the country's biggest museums to permanently house the collection, previously displayed at a discrete private museum on the outskirts of Zurich, has rekindled debate over long-simmering suspicions around the provenance of some pieces. 

Buhrle (1890-1956) amassed a fortune selling weapons to both the Nazis and the Allies during the war, using his wealth to buy around 600 artworks by the end of his life.

The Buhrle Foundation itself confirms that 13 paintings bought by the German-born industrialist, who later acquired Swiss citizenship, had been stolen by the Nazis from Jewish owners in France.

Following a series of court cases after the war, Buhrle in the 1940s returned all 13 pieces to their rightful owners then repurchased nine of them, the foundation said.

'Historical blindness'

Suspicions have meanwhile continued to swirl around the origins of other works in the collection, which includes famous works by the likes of Manet, Degas, Cezanne, Monet, Renoir, Gaugin and Picasso.

The Buhrle Foundation last week presented a report detailing the provenance research it has conducted over the past two decades, concluding that there were no indications of "problematic provenance" for any of the 203 works in the current collection.

Even though Buhrle conducted business during World War II, "he has not left us a collection of Nazi art," collection director Lukas Gloor told a press conference.

In a bid to remove any remaining doubts, the Kunsthaus has asked a team of independent experts to review the methods used to determine the provenance of works in the collection. 

Cahn, 72, said she plans to buy back her paintings at the original purchase price. 

Contacted by AFP, a spokesman for the Kunsthaus said it was not aware of an official request for works to be withdrawn.

"So far, Ms. Cahn has not informed the museum of any intention for a 'withdrawal' or 'buy back'," spokesman Bjoern Quellenberg said. 

"As long as we haven't been informed directly and personally by the artist, we will not issue any public statement about these plans," he said. 

Cahn accused the museum of "historical blindness".

"Buying art doesn't whitewash you. Collecting art doesn't make you a better human being," she wrote. 

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