Showing posts with label egon schiele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label egon schiele. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

London Lecture: From Murder To Museums: Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler and the Hunt For Nazi Looted Art in America - November 19

In his presentation at the Fordham Centre London on this Monday November 19, From Murder To Museums: Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler and the Hunt For Nazi Looted Art in America, Raymond J. Dowd, Partner - Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP - NYC  recounts how he seized two stolen Schieles after were spotting them at the Salon+Art Show at the Park Avenue Armory in November 2015, leading to international headlines upon restitution. The Schieles are now at Christie's auction house in New York pending an appeal.
 
Dowd traces how history's greatest murder has, until now, concealed history's greatest robbery.  The presentation traces Abraham Lincoln's idea of taking the profit out of war through the Lieber Code Executive Order 100 of April 1863, to the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conventions, to the Nuremberg Trials, to show that returning the stolen property to Holocaust victims was a truly American idea that was embraced by the Allied powers in the London Declaration of January 9, 1943.
 
Dowd discusses how 1. confiscatory US tax laws, 2. a fair market value deduction for artworks donated to museums, and 3. an unwillingness of museums to look gift horses in the mouth led to the current situation of US museums having to deal with large inventories of unprovenanced artworks that left Europe after 1933, but were created prior to 1946.   Learn how U.S. taxpayers foot the bill while America's elite filled the nation's greatest cultural institutions with toxic assets.

Dowd presents a new vision of how our museums can better fulfill their charitable and educational missions while respecting the often bloodstained history of the artworks in their care.

RSVP details at the link below:


www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. Attorney and AuthorCopyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2017-2018) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Monday, November 12, 2018

Tonight in NYC - Monday November 12 - From Murder To Museums: Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler and The Hunt For Nazi Looted Art In America


From Murder To Museums: Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler and The Hunt For Nazi Looted Art In America

November 12, 2018 - 6:30pm to 9:00pm


Sponsored by the FAME Center, the Cardozo Law Institute in Holocaust and Human Rights and the Art Law Society
 
In their presentation, From Murder To Museums: Abraham Lincoln, Adolf Hitler and the Hunt For Nazi Looted Art in America, Raymond J. Dowd, Partner - Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP - NYC, and Samuel A. Blaustein, Partner - Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP - NYC, recount how they seized two stolen Schieles after they were spotted at the Salon+Art Show at the Park Avenue Armory in November 2015, leading to international headlines upon their restitution to their clients. The Schieles are now at Christie's with an appellate court blocking the sale. 
 
The presentation traces Abraham Lincoln's idea of taking the profit out of war through the Lieber Code Executive Order 100 of April 1863, to the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conventions, to the Nuremberg Trials, to show that returning the stolen property to Holocaust victims was an American idea.  
 
The attorneys discuss how 1. Confiscatory US tax laws, 2. A fair market value deduction for artworks donated to museums, and 3. An unwillingness of museums to look gift horses in the mouth led to the current situation of US museums having to deal with large inventories of unprovenanced works that left Europe after 1933, but were created prior to 1946.
 
Register here:


https://cardozo.yu.edu/events/murder-museums-abraham-lincoln-adolf-hitler-and-hunt-nazi-looted-art-America




www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. Attorney and AuthorCopyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2017-2018) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Friday, June 03, 2016

US Senate To Hold Hearings on Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act

Next Tuesday, June 7, the Senate Judiciary's Subcommittee on the Constitution, Subcommittee on Oversight, Agency Action, Federal Rights and Federal Courts will hold hearings on


 S. 2763, the Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act – Reuniting Victims with Their Lost Heritage


Date: Tuesday, June 7, 2016                   


Time: 01:00 PM Location: Dirksen Senate Office Building 226


Presiding: Chairman Cornyn


Here is a link, if you can't attend, you can follow on the Judiciary Committee's website:




http://www.judiciary.senate.gov/meetings/s-2763-the-holocaust-expropriated-art-recovery-act_reuniting-victims-with-their-lost-heritage


According to govtrack, the bill has a 2% chance of being enacted:


Introduced:
Apr 7, 2016
Status:
Referred to Committee on Apr 7, 2016
This bill was assigned to a congressional committee on April 7, 2016, which will consider it before possibly sending it on to the House or Senate as a whole.
Sponsor:
John Cornyn
Senior Senator from Texas
Republican
Text:
Read Text »
Last Updated: Apr 7, 2016
Length: 8 pages

Source:  https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/114/s2763


According to CRS:


The summary below was written by the Congressional Research Service, which is a nonpartisan division of the Library of Congress.

4/7/2016--Introduced. Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016
This bill allows civil claims or causes of action to recover artwork or other cultural property unlawfully lost because of persecution during the Nazi era, or for damages for the taking or detaining of such artwork or cultural property, to be commenced within six years after the claimant's actual discovery of: (1) the identity and location of the artwork or cultural property, and (2) information or facts sufficient to indicate that the claimant has a claim for a possessory interest in the artwork or cultural property that was unlawfully lost.
Such statutory limitation period of six years after actual discovery preempts any other statutes of limitation or defenses relating to the passage of time.
The term: (1) "persecution during the Nazi era" means persecution by the Nazis or their allies between January 1, 1933, and December 31, 1945, that was based on race, ethnicity, or religion; and (2) "unlawfully lost" includes any theft, seizure, forced sale, sale under duress, or other loss of an artwork or cultural property that would not have occurred absent such persecution.
This Act applies to claims or actions that are pending on the date of enactment of this Act or filed after its enactment but before 2027. Such claims or actions may include those: (1) that were dismissed before enactment of this Act based on the expiration of a federal or state statute of limitations, laches, or any other defense at law or equity relating to the passage of time; and (2) in which final judgment has not been entered.


Text of the Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016

The text of the bill below is as of Apr 7, 2016 (Introduced).
II
114th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. 2763
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
April 7, 2016
(for himself, Mr. Cruz, Mr. Schumer, and Mr. Blumenthal) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
A BILL
To provide the victims of Holocaust-era persecution and their heirs a fair opportunity to recover works of art confiscated or misappropriated by the Nazis.
1.
Short title
This Act may be cited as the Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016.
2.
Findings
Congress finds the following:
(1)
It is estimated that the Nazis confiscated or otherwise misappropriated as many as 650,000 works of art throughout Europe as part of their genocidal campaign against the Jewish people and other persecuted groups. This has been described as the greatest displacement of art in human history.
(2)
Following World War II, the United States and its allies attempted to return the stolen artworks to their countries of origin. Despite these efforts, many works of art were never reunited with their owners. Some of the art has since been discovered in the United States.
(3)
In 1998, the United States convened a conference with 44 nations in Washington, DC, known as the Washington Conference, which produced Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art. One of these principles is that steps should be taken expeditiously to achieve a just and fair solution to claims involving such art that has not been restituted if the owners or their heirs can be identified.
(4)
The same year, Congress enacted the Holocaust Victims Redress Act (Public Law 105–158, 112 Stat. 15), which expressed the sense of Congress that all governments should undertake good faith efforts to facilitate the return of private and public property, such as works of art, to the rightful owners in cases where assets were confiscated from the claimant during the period of Nazi rule and there is reasonable proof that the claimant is the rightful owner..
(5)
In 2009, the United States participated in a Holocaust Era Assets Conference in Prague, Czech Republic, with 45 other nations. At the conclusion of this conference, the participating nations issued the Terezin Declaration, which reaffirmed the 1998 Washington Conference Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art and urged all participants to ensure that their legal systems or alternative processes, while taking into account the different legal traditions, facilitate just and fair solutions with regard to Nazi-confiscated and looted art, and to make certain that claims to recover such art are resolved expeditiously and based on the facts and merits of the claims and all the relevant documents submitted by all parties.. The Declaration also urged participants to consider all relevant issues when applying various legal provisions that may impede the restitution of art and cultural property, in order to achieve just and fair solutions, as well as alternative dispute resolution, where appropriate under law..
(6)
Numerous victims of Nazi persecution and their heirs have taken legal action to recover Nazi-confiscated art. These lawsuits face significant procedural obstacles partly due to State statutes of limitations, which typically bar claims within some limited number of years from either the date of the loss or the date that the claim should have been discovered. In some cases, this means that the claims expired before World War II even ended. (See, e.g., The Detroit Institute of Arts v. Ullin, No. 06–10333, 2007 WL 1016996 (E.D. Mich. Mar. 31, 2007).) The unique and horrific circumstances of World War II and the Holocaust make statutes of limitations and other time-based procedural defenses especially burdensome to the victims and their heirs. Those seeking recovery of Nazi-confiscated art must painstakingly piece together their cases from a fragmentary historical record ravaged by persecution, war, and genocide. This costly process often cannot be done within the time constraints imposed by existing law.
(7)
Federal legislation is needed because the only court that has considered the question held that the Constitution prohibits States from making exceptions to their statutes of limitations to accommodate claims involving the recovery of Nazi-confiscated art. In Von Saher v. Norton Simon Museum of Art, 592 F.3d 954 (9th Cir. 2009), the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit invalidated a California law that extended the State statute of limitations for claims seeking recovery of Holocaust-era artwork. The Court held that the law was an unconstitutional infringement of the Federal Government’s exclusive authority over foreign affairs, which includes the resolution of war-related disputes. In light of this precedent, the enactment of a Federal law is the best way to ensure that claims to Nazi-confiscated art are adjudicated on their merits.
3.
Purposes
The purposes of this Act are the following:
(1)
To ensure that laws governing claims to Nazi-confiscated art further United States policy as set forth in the Washington Conference Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art, the Holocaust Victims Redress Act, and the Terezin Declaration.
(2)
To ensure that claims to artwork stolen or misappropriated by the Nazis are not barred by statutes of limitations and other similar legal doctrines but are resolved in a just and fair manner on the merits.
4.
Definitions
In this Act—
(1)
the term actual discovery does not include any constructive knowledge imputed by law;
(2)
the term artwork or other cultural property includes any painting, sculpture, drawing, work of graphic art, print, multiples, book, manuscript, archive, or sacred or ceremonial object;
(3)
the term persecution during the Nazi era means any persecution by the Nazis or their allies during the period from January 1, 1933, to December 31, 1945, that was based on race, ethnicity, or religion; and
(4)
the term unlawfully lost includes any theft, seizure, forced sale, sale under duress, or any other loss of an artwork or cultural property that would not have occurred absent persecution during the Nazi era.
5.
Statute of limitations
(a)
In general
Notwithstanding any other provision of Federal law, any provision of State law, or any defense at law or equity relating to the passage of time (including the doctrine of laches), a civil claim or cause of action against a defendant to recover any artwork or other cultural property unlawfully lost because of persecution during the Nazi era or for damages for the taking or detaining of any artwork or other cultural property unlawfully lost because of persecution during the Nazi era may be commenced not later than 6 years after the actual discovery by the claimant or the agent of the claimant of—
(1)
the identity and location of the artwork or cultural property; and
(2)
information or facts sufficient to indicate that the claimant has a claim for a possessory interest in the artwork or cultural property that was unlawfully lost.
(b)
Possible misidentification
For purposes of subsection (a)(1), in a case in which there is a possibility of misidentification of the artwork or cultural property, the identification of the artwork or cultural property shall occur on the date on which there are facts sufficient to determine that the artwork or cultural property is likely to be the artwork or cultural property that was unlawfully lost.
(c)
Applicability
(1)
In general
Subsection (a) shall apply to any civil claim or cause of action (including a civil claim or cause of action described in paragraph (2)) that is—
(A)
pending on the date of enactment of this Act; or
(B)
filed during the period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act and ending on December 31, 2026.
(2)
Inclusion of previously dismissed claims
A civil claim or cause of action described in this paragraph is a civil claim or cause of action—
(A)
that was dismissed before the date of enactment of this Act based on the expiration of a Federal or State statute of limitations or any other defense at law or equity relating to the passage of time (including the doctrine of laches); and
(B)
in which final judgment has not been entered.







www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. Attorney and AuthorCopyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2015-2016) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Sunday, June 07, 2015

Raubkunst/Stolen Art Alert in Vienna: Austrian State Treaty of 1955 Requires Austria To Return Nazi Looted Art, Austrian Politicians Continue To Lie



Egon Schiele's Dead City III - Stolen from Fritz Grunbaum

Austria's Shameful Disregard of Its Continuing Treaty Obligations

The Austria State Treaty of 1995 permitted the Russians, French, British and U.S. to depart occupied Vienna.   It was written in English, Russian and French so that the rest of the world could understand exactly what Austria had promised to do.   Below is Article 26 of the Treaty.   It says that Austria is supposed to find and return all property belonging to Jews.

Article 26 was a key aspect of the Allied victory in World War II.  American soldiers lost their lives for Article 26, and the U.S. State Department should wake up and demand Austria's obedience to its obligations.

To its shame, Austria and its politicians have lied to the world and done everything possible to ensure that the children and grandchildren of Nazis could enjoy the property stolen from Vienna's Jews.

The Austria State Treaty is the legal equivalent of the U.S. Constitution.  So if an Austrian tells you that an Austrian law prevents Austria from giving back property stolen from Jews, they are simply lying.   In 2009 I confronted Austrian diplomats with the text of Article 26 at a conference in Prague after they denied Austria's ongoing treaty obligations to despoiled Holocaust victims.

Harvey Weinstein's Woman in Gold with Helen Mirren opened in Vienna on this June 4 to a firestorm of press.  Let's hope that Austrians learn from Hollywood and demand that their politicians start to follow the law of their land, rather than shaming Austria in endless litigation in US courts.
 
Article 26

PROPERTY, RIGHTS AND INTERESTS OF MINORITY GROUPS

IN AUSTRIA

1. In so far as such action has not already been taken, Austria undertakes

that, in all cases where property, legal rights or interests in Austria have since

13th March, 1938, been subject of forced transfer or measures of sequestration,

confiscation or control on account of the racial origin or religion of the owner,

the said property shall be returned and the said legal rights and interests shall

be restored together with their accessories. Where return or restoration is

impossible, compensation shall be granted for losses incurred by reason of such

measures to the same extent as is, or may be, given to Austrian nationals generally

in respect of war damage.

2. Austria agrees to take under its control all property, legal rights and

interests in Austria of persons, organizations or communities which, individually

or as members of groups, were the object of racial, religious or other Nazi measures

of persecution where, in the case of persons, such property, rights and interests

remain heirless or unclaimed for six months after the coming into force of the

present Treaty, or where in the case of organizations and communities such

organizations or communities have ceased to exist. Austria shall transfer such

property, rights and interests to appropriate agencies or organizations to be

designated by the Four Heads of Mission in Vienna by agreement with the Austrian

Government to be used for the relief and rehabilitation of victims of

persecution by the Axis Powers, it being understood that these provisions do

not require Austria to make payments in foreign exchange or other transfers

to foreign countries which would constitute a burden on the Austrian economy.

Such transfer shall be effected within eighteen months from the coming into

force of the present Treaty and shall include property, rights and interests required

to be restored under paragraph 1, of this Article.



www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2014-2015) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Art Law: From Murder To Museums - Recent Nazi Looted Art Cases - May 14 2015




Girl With Black Hair by Egon Schiele - Stolen From Fritz Grunbaum
(currently at Oberlin College)

THE NEW ROCHELLE BAR ASSOCIATION

Invites Members to attend a FREE 2 Credit CLE Course

FROM MURDER TO MUSEUMS: Recent Nazi Looted Art Cases

With Speakers:

Hon. Barbara Jaffe
Acting Justice, Supreme Court, 1st Judicial District, New York, NY
Raymond J. Dowd, Esq.
Partner-Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP, New York, NY


This free course, which includes lite dinner, is offered ONLY to our current members and is sponsored by NEW ROCHELLE BAR ASSOCIATION

WHERE: Monroe College, GADDY HALL, 380 Main Street, New Rochelle, N.Y.
WHEN: Thursday, May 14, 2015, Registration and Lite Dinner at 5:30 pm; CLE 6 – 8 pm

This 2-credit SKILLS CLE Course is approved as Transitional and Non-Transitional (appropriate for both newly admitted and experienced attorneys).  The NEW ROCHELLE BAR ASSOCIATION is certified by the New York State Continuing Legal Education Board as an Accredited Provider of Continuing Legal Education in the State of New York

EMAIL YOUR RESPONSE to Jeffrey L. Levin, Esq., at jeffrey.levin.law@gmail.com

PLEASE NOTE: SEATING IS STRICTLY LIMITED TO THE FIRST 75 REGISTRANTS.

[NOTE! We will send a confirmation of registration by return email.
  If you do not receive a confirmation you are not registered and will not be admitted.]

NOTE: You will not be admitted if you arrive 10 minutes or more after the program begins.
Also, if you enroll for a CLE class and are unable to attend, please call Jeff Levin, Esq. at 725-3468 at least 24 hours in advance so that members who may have been placed on a waiting list can be registered.  If you enroll but fail to timely cancel for more than one CLE class, you may be precluded from attending future CLEs.

For more information on Nazi art looting, check out Can A Jewish Man Imprisoned In The Dachau Concentration Camp Transfer Good Title To A Schiele Painting?

www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.
Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2014-2015) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Wednesday, April 01, 2015

Nazi Art Looting Program At Colorado Supreme Court - May 7, 2015

 
 
Looted Masterpieces:
The Ethical Implications of World War II Stolen Art
May 7, 2015 at 5:00 p.m.
 
Introduction by The Honorable Robert Bacharach,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
 
Presented by Raymond J. Dowd
 
 
 
 
This seminar will give attendees an overview about art looting during the Second World War and how sales of stolen works bankrolled large parts of the Nazi war machine. Attendees will also learn about laws that were passed in the wake of the looting, to return stolen art to its rightful owners, and the extent to which those laws have been successful. 
 
1 Ethics and 1 General Hour of Colorado CLE Credit
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Registration  opens at 4:30 pm.
Introduction:  5:00 pm –  5:15 pm
Presentation:  5:15 pm-6:15 pm
Reception: 6:15 pm – 7:15 pm
Location:   The Colorado Supreme Court 2 East 14th Avenue Denver, CO 80203
 
Mr. Dowd is a partner in the law firm of Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP in New York City. His legal practice centers on litigation in federal and state trial and appellate courts, arbitration, and mediation. Notable cases in which he has acted as lead counsel involve art law, copyrights, trademarks, cybersquatting, privacy, trusts and decedents estates, licensing, corporate and real estate transactions. He has litigated questions of Austrian, Canadian, French, German, Italian, Russian, and Swiss law.

 

Registration Information

Name: __________________________________________

Firm:    __________________________________________

Address: ________________________________________

                 ________________________________________

Phone No.:  _____________________________

 

Registration Fee includes wine and cheese reception.

FBA Member $25                       Non Member $35

Send check payable to the Federal Bar Association Colorado Chapter

by May 4, 2015 to:  FBA Colorado Chapter, P.O. Box 13966, Denver, CO 80201

 

Cancellations received by 5:00 p.m., three business days before the seminar will receive a full refund; less than three business days prior to the seminar will be refunded less a $10 administrative fee; no shows will not receive a refund.

 
CLE Committee Co-Chairs Mimi Tsankov, Board Member,

and Margaret Cordova, President, FBA Colorado Chapter

For information on FBA Colorado Chapter membership, events and programs, please visit our website at www.fedbar.org.  Email:  fedbarcolorado@gmail.com.



www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2014-2015) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Monday, March 09, 2015

Nazi Looted Art: Cases, Ethics and Law - March 24, 2015 Westchester Women's Bar Association




Nazi Looted Art: Cases, Ethics and Law


Presenter: Raymond Dowd, Esq.  
With last year’s film Monuments Men, the upcoming Woman in Gold starring Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds, and with the documentary The Rape of Europa on PBS, the story of Adolph Hitler’s art looting program is finally gaining Hollywood’s attention. A find of 1,400 artworks in Munich last year in the possession of Cornelius Gurlitt, the son of one of Hitler’s art dealers, raised an international firestorm. But the unfinished business of World War II remains unfinished, with governments and families continuing to trace stolen artworks that are hidden in public and private art collections worldwide. With D.A. Robert Morgenthau’s seizure of Egon Schiele’s Portrait of Wally and Dead City III in 1998, world attention focused on the topic. Speaker Raymond J. Dowd of Dunnington Bartholow & Miller LLP brought the first federal Holocaust-era Nazi art looting case to trial in the Southern District of New York and argued it twice to the Second Circuit. In an entertaining and art-filled lecture, he will present the law, the history and the ethical concerns that continue to face our courts today.

Date: Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Time: 6:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Registration and Networking
6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Program
Place: Toscana Ristorante
214 Main Street, Eastchester, NY 10707
Fee: $55.00 for WWBA members, $65.00 for non-members.

Dinner; cash bar

RSVP: By March 19h, 2015 to
Executivedirector@wwbany.org
1.5 CLE Credits (includes 0.5 hr. Ethics)1
Attendance limited to WWBA and WPBA members and their invited guests.
www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2014-2015) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Dunnington Partner Raymond J. Dowd to Keynote NYS Bar Association Trusts & Estates Event

 
 
 
Dunnington Partner Raymond J. Dowd will present the luncheon keynote lecture at the annual meeting of the Trusts and Estates Law Section of the New York Bar Association on January 28, 2015.  The Trusts and Estates Law Section is one of the largest sections of the New York State Bar Association, and its annual meeting attracts over six hundred attendees.  Mr. Dowd will address the topic Nazi Art Looting, Stolen Art and Our Museums: Why The Ghosts of The Past Still Haunt Us.  Tickets to the luncheon are available through http://www.nysba.org/Trusts/.

The Controversy Over Stolen Art In U.S. Museums

Why do American museums contain stolen European artworks acquired during and after World War II?  The National Stolen Property Act and comparable state laws have criminalized transporting, receiving and concealing stolen property for decades, yet the problem persists.  The keynote address will explore the reasons for this and the implications for trusts and estates practitioners.  

The Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act of 1909 cleared the way for America’s wealthiest citizens to import a vast collection of European art into the United States tax-free.  In the 1930s, a dispute between Andrew W. Mellon and the Internal Revenue Service resulted in the allowance of a tax deduction for the fair market value of art donated to U.S. museums. 

Following World War II, affluent American collectors clamored for bargain-priced art to donate to U.S. museums in exchange for substantial reductions on their personal income taxes.  Nazi spoliations and the murders of millions of Jews and others meant that the international markets were flooded with cheap, albeit stolen, artworks.  From 1945 through the early 1960s, the U.S. State Department issued warnings to U.S. museums, collectors, and dealers, advising them not to acquire artworks without solid provenance and requesting that they assist the U.S. in recovering artworks belonging to European citizens.  These State Department warnings were ignored by museums hungry to build world-class collections of European art.  Their donors, buoyed by a strong dollar, bought stolen art on the cheap and took massive tax deductions based on sale prices of comparable pieces from the latest auctions. 

The loophole in the tax code incentivizing donations of stolen art persists today, raising profound questions of tax fairness and abuse of not-for-profit corporations nationwide.  As a result of this breach of the public trust, the American public continues to subsidize museums with tax breaks yet will inherit collections tainted by stolen or undocumented artworks.  As U.S. museums have repeatedly acknowledged, the problem of artworks lacking appropriate provenance documentation in U.S. museums is a tremendous one, raising serious questions about the stewardship of our nation’s museums.





Over the last decade, Mr. Dowd has represented a number of heirs of Holocaust victims and owners in trying to reclaim artworks stolen during World War II faced with laches defenses.  In 2006, Mr. Dowd was retained by the heirs of artist George Grosz to recover three artworks at the Museum of Modern Art stolen from Grosz’s Jewish art dealer Alfred Flechtheim shortly after Grosz fled in January 1933 to New York, where he taught at the Art Students League on 57th Street.  Grosz was declared “cultural enemy number one” by the Nazis, who were enraged by Grosz’s caricatures of Hitler and other prominent party members.  Flechtheim’s inventory of Grosz artwork was stolen (“Aryanized”) in 1933.  Mr. Dowd sued on April 9, 2009, within three years of the MoMA’s trustees refusing to return the artworks.  Under New York’s traditional “demand and refusal” rule, the suit was timely.  However, the Southern District of New York found an “implied refusal” because the MoMA had spent a lengthy amount of time in settlement discussions.  Grosz v. MoMA, 772 F.Supp.2d 473 (S.D.N.Y. 2010).  Mr. Dowd went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court in challenging this ruling.  403 Fed.Appx. 575 (2d Cir. 2010); 132 S.Ct. (2011)(denying cert.).  MoMA continues to resist sharing evidence necessary for the heirs to demonstrate that the artworks were stolen from Alfred Flechtheim and laundered through Curt Valentin, an agent for the Nazis operating in New York.

In 2008, Mr. Dowd was lead trial counsel in the Southern District of New York the first Holocaust-era art case in U.S. federal court history ever to go to trial: Bakalar v. Vavra, 2008 WL 4067335 (S.D.N.Y. 2008).  The trial judge applied Swiss law to give a 1964 purchaser good title to the artwork.  Mr. Dowd successfully appealed to the Second Circuit, obtaining a reversal and remand for the trial judge to consider evidence of Nazi looting in the record and to apply New York law.  619 F.3d 136 (2d. Cir. 2010).  The trial judge, in decisions affirmed by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, excluded an expert report by Dr. Jonathan Petropoulos concluding that the artworks were looted from Fritz Grunbaum by the Nazis and instead decided that although the purchaser could not show good chain of title, Grunbaum heirs’ claims were barred by the doctrine of laches, despite there being no evidence that the family knew that any artworks had survived World War II.  819 F. Supp.2d 298 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) aff’d 500 Fed. Appx. 6 (2d Cir. 2012), cert. denied 133 S.Ct. 2038 (2013).  Grunbaum’s heirs continue to advocate for the consideration by the authorities of the expert evidence of Nazi looting of Grunbaum’s collection and for restitution to be made.





On November 4, 2014, Mr. Dowd succeeded in recovering for the heirs of Fritz Grunbaum Town on the Blue River (1910), a watercolor drawing by the Austrian artist Egon Schiele which was auctioned at Christie’s following its recovery.  Grunbaum was a renowned Viennese cabaret performer who had eighty-one Schiele artworks in his apartment when the Gestapo arrested him on March 22, 1938 and deported him to the Dachau Concentration Camp, where he died penniless on January 14, 1941.  Town on the Blue River sold at auction for 2.5 million dollars—more than double Christie’s high estimate—and was the subject of an October 24, 2014 New York Times article, Dispute Over Nazi Victim’s Art: Christie’s and Sotheby’s Differ on Handling of 2 Schieles.  European and American museums and private collectors today hold many artworks stolen from Fritz Grunbaum, and Mr. Dowd continues recovery efforts on behalf of the Grunbaum family.

In Matter of Flamenbaum, 22 N.Y.3d 962, 1 N.E.3d 782 (2013), Mr. Dowd succeeded on behalf of the world-famous Pergamon Museum in Berlin in persuading the New York Court of Appeals to order the return of an ancient Assyrian tablet dating to the reign of King Tukulti-Ninurta II (1200 B.C.).  The tablet went missing when Stalin’s troops invaded and occupied East Berlin in 1945.  It turned up in 2006 during a contested accounting proceeding in Nassau County Surrogate’s Court in a safe deposit box that belonged to a deceased Auschwitz survivor.  Ultimately, the New York Court of Appeals rejected the executor’s argument that the “spoils of war” doctrine permitted the decedent to retain the amulet.  The Court further rejected the argument that the doctrine of laches barred the Museum’s restitution claim.  In the wake of Flamenbaum, it is clear that under New York law, where there is a thief in the chain of title, no subsequent possessor can take good title and that the burden of proving the affirmative defense of laches is a heavy one.

In 2013, Mr. Dowd wrote “Nazi Looted Art and Cocaine: When Museum Directors Take It, Call The Cops” 14 Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion (May 2013).  In the article, Mr. Dowd argues that statutes of limitations and laches cannot be used to launder title to stolen property, that Nazi looted art ought to be treated like contraband or drugs, and that due to the unique facts of World War II and U.S. foreign policy repudiating Nazi acts of property spoliation, U.S. museums should not be able to shield Nazi-era stolen art in their collections from scrutiny and restitution.  In 2013, as a result of advocacy efforts in which Mr. Dowd participated, the Federal Bar Association now advocates that Congress should create a Commission on Nazi-Confiscated Art Claims to assist heirs in recovering Holocaust-era looted assets.

About Ray Dowd

Mr. Dowd’s first case in New York County Surrogate’s Court was Matter of Doris Duke, a dispute over the estate of the American Tobacco heiress.  In 1994, Mr. Dowd successfully petitioned for the removal of Doris Duke’s butler, Bernard Lafferty, and U.S Trust Company as co-executors of the Duke estate.  These efforts aided in the recovery of millions in misspent funds.  Mr. Dowd’s efforts were chronicled in Vanity Fair magazine and on the front pages of New York’s tabloids.  The case garnered worldwide headlines and was immortalized by Hollywood.  As part of the subsequent proceedings, Mr. Dowd succeeded in upholding the first testamentary honorary pet trust in New York State history by using the life of the trustee as the measuring life to create a $100,000 trust fund for Ms. Duke’s dogs.  Mr. Dowd has since litigated numerous contested probate matters, guardianship proceedings, and accountings, including a rare contested adoption proceeding in Surrogate’s Court on behalf of a 9/11 victim.

Mr. Dowd is a partner in the law firm of Dunnington, Bartholow & Miller LLP in New York City.  He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Federal Bar Association, having served as General Counsel (2011-2012), Vice President for the Second Circuit (2008-2013), President of the Southern District of New York Chapter (2006-2008), on the Editorial Board of The Federal Lawyer (2009-2011), and on the FBA Government Relations Committee (2010-2013).  From 2013-2014, Mr. Dowd served as President of Network of Bar Leaders, a coalition of over fifty bar associations in the Metropolitan New York area.  In 2013, he was appointed to serve on the Planning Committee for the 2014 Second Circuit Judicial Conference titled Cybersecurity in an Age of Cyberterrorism.  Mr. Dowd is the author of Copyright Litigation Handbook (West 8th Ed. 2014-2015) (updated annually).

Mr. Dowd’s practice consists of federal and state trial and appellate litigation, arbitration and mediation.  He served as lead trial counsel in notable cases involving art law, copyrights, trademarks, cybersquatting, privacy, trusts and decedents estates, licensing, corporate and real estate transactions.  He has litigated questions of Austrian, Canadian, French, German, Italian, Russian and Swiss law.

Mr. Dowd lectures frequently on copyright litigation, including the prestigious Copyright Society of the U.S.A.  At the 2009 Prague Conference on Holocaust-Era Assets, he was selected for an expert legal panel, and he has lectured worldwide on the matter of looted art, including at the Jewish Museum in Berlin, Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the San Francisco War Memorial, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and many chapters of the Federal Bar Association.  In 2007, he co-founded the annual Art Litigation and Dispute Resolution Institute at New York County Lawyers’ Association.  In 2014, Mr. Dowd was selected by the Brandeis Society to deliver a lecture commemorating the 76th anniversary of Kristallnacht.  He currently serves on the Board of Governors and is Chair of the Education Committee at the National Arts Club in New York City.

Mr. Dowd is a graduate of Manhattan College (B.A. International Studies cum laude, 1986) and Fordham Law School (1991), where he served on the Fordham International Law Journal.  He speaks French and Italian.  He is admitted to practice in the State of New York, to the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York, and to the First, Second, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Circuit Courts of Appeals.

About Dunnington

Dunnington, Bartholow & Miller LLP was selected as a 2014 Top Ranked Law Firm for Intellectual Property by Corporate Counsel/ALM/The American Lawyer.  Dunnington is a full-service law firm providing corporate, litigation, intellectual property, real estate, taxation and estate planning services for an international clientele.  Find out more at www.dunnington.com.

Attorney advertising.  Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2012-2013) by Raymond J. Dowd
 Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw

Thursday, November 06, 2014

Brandeis Association Selects Dunnington Partner Raymond J. Dowd To Commemorate 76th Anniversary of Kristallnacht


Egon Schiele's Town on the Blue River - Krumau (1910)
 
            Dunnington partner Raymond J. Dowd has been selected to speak at “Murder, Mystery & Masterpieces: The Ethical Implications of World War II Stolen Art,” to be presented by the Brandeis Association and the Queens Women’s Bar Association. The event will take place the Queens County Bar Association (90-35 148th Street, Jamaica, NY) tonight at 6:00 p.m., the date being chosen to coincide with the 76th anniversary of Kristallnacht (November 9-10, 1938). A light kosher supper will precede the event, beginning at 5:30 p.m.
 
       The Nazis are infamous for their rampant theft of artworks belonging to Jewish people and others deemed undesirable. Public awareness of this pillaging has only grown in recent years with the release of films such as The Monuments Men (2014) and The Rape of Europa (2006). Additionally, newly opened archives in the United States and Europe have contributed to an ever-increasing number of claims brought by the Nazis’ victims and their descendants. As a result, the body of case law pertaining to such matters is constantly growing and evolving.
 
       Mr. Dowd recently represented the heirs of Holocaust victim Fritz Grunbaum, who was killed at Dachau in 1941, in coming to a restitution settlement agreement concerning the painting Town on the Blue River (Stadt am blauen Fluss – Krumau), painted by Egon Schiele in 1910. The watercolor landscape was among eighty-one works of art by Schiele seized from Mr. Grunbaum’s apartment in Vienna by the Gestapo in March 1938. In 1998, a spotlight was shone upon Mr. Grunbaum’s fate and that of his art when New York District Attorney Robert Morgenthau confiscated the painting Dead City III from New York City’s Museum of Modern Art, where it was on loan from Austria. Because the exhibition was immune from seizure as a result of an international treaty, the piece was ultimately returned; however, the incident was key in propelling the movement to restore Nazi-looted artworks to their rightful owners. Town on the Blue River was auctioned at Christie’s at their Impressionist and Modern Evening Sale on November 5, 2014, where it reached a record high of $2,965,000. The proceeds will be shared by Mr. Grunbaum’s heirs and those of Ilona Gerstel, in whose possession the piece spent nearly a half-century.

     Joining Mr. Dowd in this discussion of art stolen during World War II and the legal and ethical complications in which the restitution of such pieces is mired will be Professor John Q. Barrett of St. John’s University School of Law, who also serves on the Expert Advisory Committee of the International Nuremberg Principles Academy. Following presentation of recent happenings relating to Holocaust-era assets and discussion of their longer-term impact, Mr. Dowd and Professor Barrett will welcome questions from the audience.
The event is free. To register, please click here.

About the Brandeis Association The Brandeis Association was established in 1969 as a Not for Profit Corporation. The stated purpose of the Bar association, as set forth in both the Brandeis Constitution and Articles of Incorporation, is to encourage friendship and culture among our members, to foster respect for law and legal institutions and to vigorously assert its interest in justice and fair play in the County of Queens and in the City and State of New York. All members of the Judiciary, Lawyers, Court personnel and others who support the Jewish faith and the U.S. Constitution are eligible for membership.
About Dunnington partner Raymond J. Dowd Mr. Dowd’s practice focuses on litigation in federal and state trial and appellate courts, arbitration and mediation for cases involving art law, copyrights, trademarks, cybersquatting, privacy, trusts and decedents’ estates, licensing, corporate and real estate transactions. He lectures frequently on copyright and art-related topics and has presented in many venues, including at the 2009 Prague Conference on Holocaust-Era Assets, where he served on an expert panel, the Jewish Museum in Berlin, Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, the San Francisco War Memorial, and the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. In 2007, he co-founded the Art Litigation and Dispute Resolution Institute at New York County Lawyers’ Association. Mr. Dowd authors Copyright Litigation Handbook (West 7th Ed. 2013-2014)(updated annually). Currently Mr. Dowd serves on the Board of Directors of the Federal Bar Association, having earlier held the positions of President of the Southern District of New York Chapter (2006-2008) and general counsel of the national organization, and as President of the Network of Bar Leaders.
Dunnington, Bartholow & Miller LLP was selected as a 2014 Top Ranked Law Firm for Intellectual Property by Corporate Counsel/ALM/The American Lawyer. Dunnington is a full-service law firm providing corporate, litigation, intellectual property, real estate, taxation and estate planning services for an international clientele. Find out more at www.dunnington.com.
Attorney advertising. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes 

www.dunnington.com
 Copyright law, fine art and navigating the courts. All practice, no theory.
Copyright Litigation Handbook (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2012-2013) by Raymond J. Dowd Copyright Litigation Handbook on Westlaw