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    The Gazette (Montreal)
    November 4, 2013 Monday
    Early Edition


    Sharing stories of stolen cultures; Concordia Conference looks beyond
    art looted during the Second World War to injustices suffered by First
    Nations and Armenians

    by KAREN SEIDMAN, The Gazette


    With several European museums recently facing scandals involving
    looted art, Concordia University's exploration of plundered cultures
    at an international conference this week couldn't be more timely.

    But where the focus on most stolen material concerns Nazi-looted art
    from the Second World War era, Concordia's conference on Wednesday and
    Thursday will aim to expand the issue beyond the Holocaust era to talk
    about injustices to the First Nations and Armenian communities as
    well.

    People often think of European masters when the topic of looted art
    arises, but what about the suppression of the carving of totem poles
    of First Nations people, or the assault on religious art experienced
    by the Armenians in Turkey? Frank Chalk, director of the Montreal
    Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies at Concordia, is one
    of the driving forces behind the conference and he says these
    communities have a lot to learn from each other.

    "This will help consolidate the lessons learned and share the burden
    these communities carry," he said.

    Plundered Cultures, Stolen Heritage will open a chapter in
    multidisciplinary human rights studies integrating research on
    history, cultural studies and the memory of atrocity.

    It will bring together leading experts on the cultural destruction and
    mass atrocities suffered by the First Nations, Armenian and Jewish
    peoples to discuss the motives of the perpetrators of these assaults -
    and the impact.

    Rather than a competition of suffering between groups, it will focus
    on learning from the shared experiences of these communities with the
    aim of helping all groups confront crimes against humanity and
    genocides. It will open with a keynote address by Morley Safer (which
    is sold out), a correspondent for CBS News' 60 Minutes, who is
    interested in the subject of looted art.

    Although it wasn't timed to coincide, the issue of looted art had a
    local angle last week when the beneficiaries of Max Stern, a Jewish
    art dealer who fled Nazi Germany for Montreal after he was forced to
    close his gallery, recovered a painting looted by Nazi officials 76
    years ago.

    His estate was left to Concordia, McGill University and the Hebrew
    University of Jerusalem, and the colleges began a campaign to recover
    the lost art. The Max Stern Art Restitution Project, administered by
    Concordia, has recovered 11 paintings of about 400 being traced.

    And in October, several controversies swirled in European art circles
    centred on looted art (see sidebar).

    Hollywood will even document its version of the subject with the movie
    The Monuments Men, directed by and starring George Clooney, which
    centres on a group of art historians and museum curators charged with
    rescuing art treasures taken by the Nazis. It is to be released in
    February.

    The Nazi regime systematically plundered hundreds of thousands of
    artworks from museums and individuals.

    More recently, Chalk said, the wars in the Middle East and central
    Asia illustrate that assaults on culture are still being waged - and
    are often a precursor to genocide.

    "You just have to look at the attacks on Christians in Egypt and
    Syria, where churches are being destroyed,"

    he said. "And the Buddhist statues, great treasures, destroyed by the
    Taliban in Afghanistan (just over a decade ago)."

    Clarence Epstein, director of the Max Stern Art Restitution Project,
    said the conference marks a pivotal point for Concordia, which is
    chairing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance this year.

    "It will be a symbolic and important week for us," he said. "The
    university has been spearheading this issue with regards to one
    subject, which is WWII restitution issues, but this is the first
    conference that goes beyond WWII issues and talks about injustices as
    varied as those of the First Nations and Armenian communities. "It's
    an important conference which will attract a lot of attention - at a
    time when there is a groundswell of interest in this issue."

    To see the full program, go to
    concordia.ca/events/calendar/2013/11/06/plunderedcultures/program.html.

    [email protected] Twitter: KSeidman

    Recent developments in looted art

    April 2013

    The federal government commits funding of almost $200,000 to enable
    Canadian museums to contribute to a key international research effort
    on the provenance of Holocaust-era works of art.

    October 2013

    The National Gallery of London is urged to investigate the ownership
    of a painting believed to have been stolen from a Jewish family by the
    Nazis. The Portrait of Amalie

    Zuckerkandl by Gustav Klimt is on loan to the gallery from the
    Belvedere Gallery in Vienna, but a lawyer who specializes in the
    restitution of significant artworks insists the painting was looted.

    The director of Vienna's Leopold Museum, Tobias Natter, quit after
    some of the most senior staff joined a controversial new foundation
    associated with Gustav Klimt's illegitimate son, whose works included
    Nazi propaganda.

    A probe by Dutch museums showed that 139 of their artworks, including
    a Matisse and two Kandinsky paintings, may have been plundered by the
    Nazis during the Second World War, many from Jewish owners. It showed
    that one-quarter of the 162 Dutch museums that took part in the study
    into art acquisitions between 1933 and 1945 have objects with a
    questionable history.

    Karen Seidman

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