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Transmission: Tuesday, 15th May 2007Gustav KlimtStealing KlimtÌý- The Golden portrait of Adele Bloch Bauer by Gustav Klimt, completed 100 years ago, recently sold at auction for a record sum. In 1938 the painting was stolen from its Jewish owner by the Nazis. Imagine... tells the story of Maria Altmann and her fight to reclaim her family's treasured painting. Latest posts...Gustav KlimtÌýMaria Vs the NazisPosted: Tuesday, 15th May 2007Martin Smith, writer of Stealing Klimt, on his involvement in the story of Maria Altmann, and her fight to reclaim her family’s stolen legacy.
The chance to spend hours immersed in the life story of Maria Altmann was one I couldn’t resist. Her experiences aren’t like those encountered in most Holocaust related documentaries, in some ways it feels more like a David and Goliath feature film – Erin Brockovich springs to mind.
Maria’s fight for the return of the Klimt paintings threw a harsh spotlight on Austria’s support for the Nazis, its post-war conduct and the continued injustices suffered by Holocaust survivors. It also brought the Austrian public, and the international art world, face-to-face with unanswered questions about the value of art and its importance in shaping national identity and cultural values.
Decades of letter writing and appeals got Maria nowhere yet, even when she was the only close relative left alive, Maria wouldn’t give up. She didn’t have enough resources to pay for an international lawyer to sue the Austrian government, but Randol Schoenberg, a family friend and grandson of Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg, was setting up new law firm and willing to take up the case on ‘no-win no-fee’ basis.
I joined the project after director Jane Chablani and her colleague Gilonne d’Origny had followed and filmed the legal battle for many months, it was a time when Maria’s victory was far from certain. Despite years of winning her case in the American courts - including a stunning success in the US Supreme Court (where the US State Department sided with Austria rather than an American citizen of good standing) Maria still hadn’t got her property back. Yet fighting two governments and hundreds of bureaucrats Maria hadn’t lost her good humour and sheer joy of life.
Early in 2006, in her ninetieth year, she was confidently waiting, day-by-day, for the final verdict. Her lawyer was less optimistic, by then the decision was in the hands of three arbitrators - all of them employed by the Austrian government.
I’m credited as the writer but in truth the story told itself, thanks to a determined production team and, most important of all, an elderly woman who took on two governments and won. Watch Stealing Klimt on 15th May 2007 on ´óÏó´«Ã½ One. KeywordsToolsGustav KlimtÌýVideo: "The Greatest Theft In History"Posted: Monday, 14th May 2007When the Nazis marched into Vienna the world changed forever. "The Holocaust was not only one of the greatest murders in history, it was also one of the greatest thefts in history," explains Professor of Law, Michael Bazyler.
Watch a preview of Stealing Klimt, the dramatic story of how the Nazis stole Klimt's masterpiece from Maria Altmann's family and her moving struggle to reclaim it years later. Watch the full story in Stealing Klimt on 15th May 2007 on ´óÏó´«Ã½ One. KeywordsAvailable MediaTo access video you need ToolsGustav KlimtÌýGallery: The Stolen Paintings
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Posted: Monday, 14th May 2007"The paintings were taken out of my uncle's house and stolen," recounts Maria Altmann of the day the Nazis stole her family's collection of paintings by Gustav Klimt.
See the five paintings which were taken that day, including Klimt's masterpiece, The Golden Portrait of Maria's aunt, Adele Bloch Bauer. Watch the dramatic story of Maria Altmann's struggle to have the paintings returned in Stealing Klimt on 15th May 2007 on ´óÏó´«Ã½ One. KeywordsAvailable MediaToolsGustav KlimtÌýEpisode Guide: Stealing KlimtPosted: 3rd May 2007The Golden Portrait, one of the world's most expensive paintings, was stolen by the Nazis in WWII. Maria Altmann recounts the dramatic struggle to recover her family’s stolen belongings. |
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