The heirs and great-grandchildren of Jewish Belgian art collector
Samuel Hartveld are set to be reunited with a painting that was
looted by the Nazis when he fled his home city of Antwerp during
the Second World War in May 1940.
When Hartveld and his wife left the city, the couple were forced
to leave behind their most treasured possessions including a
painting by Henry Gibbs, titled ‘Aeneas and his Family Fleeing
Burning Troy'. The painting is said to have been one of 66
paintings in a gallery owned by Hartveld in Antwerp.
The narrative painting is believed to be a commentary on the
English Civil War, which resulted in exile for many. The painting
depicts scenes from ‘The Aeneid' which is a Latin poem that tells
the legendary story of Aeneas, a Trojan who fled the fall of Troy
and travelled to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the
Romans. The painting depicts the Trojan hero, Aeneas, trying to
rescue his family from the burning city.
After surviving the war, Hartveld was never reunited with his
collection of paintings, as a majority of the works were looted
and sold by the German authorities with Hartveld and his family
receiving none of the proceeds. Some of his artworks may have
changed hands several times since 1940 and are believed to be in
galleries across Europe. The painting by Henry Gibbs was
eventually purchased from Galerie Jan de Maere in Brussels in
1994 by the Tate collection.
The independent Spoliation Advisory Panel was established by the
government in 2000 to consider claims from anyone, or their
heirs, who lost cultural property during the Nazi era, where such
an object is now in a UK public collection. Over the last 25
years, the panel has received 23 claims, with 14 works being
returned to the heirs of their former owners.
Arts Minister Sir said:
“The case of Samuel Hartveld is the perfect example of the
Spoliation Advisory Panel doing the work it was designed to do -
helping to reunite families with their most treasured possessions
that were looted by the Nazis.
“The decision to return the painting to the heirs of Samuel
Hartveld and his wife is absolutely the right decision, which I
welcome wholeheartedly.”
Director of Tate Maria Balshaw said:
“It is a profound privilege to help reunite this work with its
rightful heirs, and I am delighted to see the spoliation process
working successfully to make this happen. Although the artwork's
provenance was extensively investigated when it was acquired in
1994, crucial facts concerning previous ownership of the painting
were not known.
“I would like to thank the Trust and the Spoliation
Advisory panel for their collaboration over the last year. We now
look forward to welcoming the family to Tate in the coming months
and presenting the painting to them.”
The trustees of the Trust said:
“The trustees acting for the Trust and their counsel, Dr.
Hannes Hartung, based in Munich, are deeply grateful to the
Spoliation Advisory Panel for their recommendation that Tate
Britain restitute the narrative painting of Henry Gibbs' ‘Aeneas
and his family fleeing from burning Troy' and parliament's
ratification of that recommendation.
“This decision clearly acknowledges the awful Nazi persecution of
Samuel Hartveld and that the ‘clearly looted' painting belonged
to Mr. Hartveld, a Jewish Belgian art collector and dealer.
“The trustees acting for the Trust further thank the staff
at Tate Britain for working with the trustees and their legal
representative Dr. Hannes Hartung, to realise the return of this
important painting by a highly regarded British painter. The
staff at Tate Britain were open minded and prompt in their
approval of the Spoliation Advisory Panel's recommendation.
“Further, the trustees wish to acknowledge the scholarly efforts
of Geert Sels, author of ‘Kunst voor das Reich', in identifying
the plight of Samuel Hartveld and his family because of Nazi
persecution in Belgium during World War II. With this
restitution, the trustees acting for the Trust honour and remember the
life of Samuel Hartveld and his family.”
The Spoliation Advisory Panel received a claim from trustees
acting for the Trust, established for Mr.
Hartveld's heirs, requesting the return of a painting by Henry
Gibbs in May 2024. Following extensive research by the Trust's
legal representatives and others into how the family had come to
lose the painting, it was identified as being in the Tate's
collection.
The Spoliation Advisory Panel then considered all the evidence
and decided that the legal and moral claims to the restitution of
the painting were sufficiently compelling for them to advise the
Secretary of State that the Trust is entitled to its
return.
The Government welcomes Tate's full cooperation with this process
throughout and its prompt agreement to accept the Panel's
recommendation in full.
ENDS
Notes to editors
The Holocaust (Return of Cultural Objects) Act 2009 allows
national museums to return cultural objects, where the Spoliation
Advisory Panel recommends and the Arts Minister
agrees.
The Spoliation Advisory Panel, together with the equivalent
committees in France, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands is a
member of the Network of European Restitution Committees on
Nazi-Looted Art. The Network promotes international collaboration
and information sharing on these issues.