Vincent van Gogh

Liz Taylor Keeps Van Gogh Despite Jewish Family's Claims

View of the Asylum and Chapel at Saint-Remy.
View of the Asylum and Chapel at Saint-Remy.

The U.S. Supreme Court allowed actress Elizabeth Taylor to keep a Vincent van Gogh painting this morning, rejecting an appeal by descendants of a Jewish woman who said she was forced to sell "View of the Asylum and Chapel at Saint-Remy" before fleeing Nazi Germany in 1939, according to Reuters.

Four South African and Canadian descendants of Margarete Mauthner, a Jewish woman who fled Germany in 1939 for South Africa, sued Taylor in 2004 in federal court in California.

The lawsuit claimed the Nazis forced Mauthner to sell the painting under duress before fleeing Germany and that it should be returned to her descendants under the 1998 U.S. Holocaust Victims Redress Act.

Taylor said the record showed the painting was sold through two Jewish art dealers to a Jewish art collector, and that there was no evidence of any Nazi coercion or participation in the transactions.

A U.S. appeals court upheld the dismissal of the lawsuit.

 

Letters to a Young Curator

Written with pictures: A letter from Vincent van Gogh to Émile Bernard.
Joseph Zehavi/ The Morgan Library & Museum
Written with pictures: A letter from Vincent van Gogh to Émile Bernard.

The Morgan Library displays van Gogh’s fiery correspondence with his promoter Émile Bernard.  read more »

Be Like Van Gogh: Eat Strawberries in the Spring

DSCF0435.JPG
Several times in the 1880s, Vincent Van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo about his efforts to eat "strawberries in the spring." He was talking about learning to enjoy things in the moment, also of not trying to rush something that comes maybe once a year. The same can be said for eating blueberries in summer; I saw these in the Pennsylvania mountains...  read more »

Van Gogh's Drawings: A Precise Draftsman, Emotional Cauldron

Fame hasn’t always been kind to the reputation of Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), whose drawings are  read more »

Van Gogh’s Drawings: A Precise Draftsman, Emotional Cauldron

A faithful depiction of the observed subject: Vincent van Gogh
Courtesy of Vincent van Gogh Foundation
A faithful depiction of the observed subject: Vincent van Gogh

Fame hasn’t always been kind to the reputation of Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), whose drawings  read more »

Exquisite Portraits, Fauvist Hues And a Handful of Spiritual Quests

Unless you’re a devotee of 15th-century Netherlandish painting, chances are you’ve only stopped  read more »

Exquisite Portraits, Fauvist Hues And a Handful of Spiritual Quests

Hans Memling
Hans Memling

Unless you’re a devotee of 15th-century Netherlandish painting, chances are you’ve only  read more »

Mad-as-Hell Playwright Comes Out Swinging

The moment of the week for me came during John Patrick Shanley's feverish, deranged and gloriously w  read more »