Just a couple of days before the Sept 29th auction, the Potomack Company has pulled from its sale the Renoir found at a flea market for $7.00 by the consignor. The painting and Potomack have received much press coverage and publicity about the rare flea market find. It turns out the painting was listed in the Baltimore Museum of Art in 1951. Further investigations are being conducted to ensure proper ownership and title.
The news release from the Potomack Company tells of the background of the painting coming to Potomack, its own check with the Art Loss Register and the FBI's stolen painting list and the decision to pull the painting. Kudos to the Potomack Company for not only doing the right thing and pulling the painting, but also for the press release explaining to the public what happened. In the interest of openness, I do on regularly work with the fine folks at Potomack.
The Potomack Company reports
RENOIR PAINTING PAYSAGE BORDS DE SEINE WITHDRAWN FROM SEPTEMBER 29 AUCTION
The Potomack Company announces the withdrawal of Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s painting Paysage Bords de Seine from a planned sale on September 29 at the Potomack Company auction house after a question was raised by The Baltimore Museum of Art on Wednesday, September 26, about the ownership of the painting.
Background:
On July 27, 2012, a consignor brought a painting into The Potomack Company that she had bought at a flea market, and Potomack’s fine art specialist, Anne Norton Craner, confirmed that it was a known Renoir painting titled Paysage Bords de Seine painted in the late 19th century.
The same day, July 27, 2012, Potomack Company promptly contacted Art Loss Register – a service that records and follows missing and stolen works of art - confirming that the painting had never been reported stolen or missing. Potomack also consulted the FBI’s art theft website to confirm that it was not listed as stolen by the FBI. Potomack researched the provenance of the painting, determining that it was a painting listed in Bernheim-Jeune’s Renoir catalogue raisonne and that the last record of the painting’s exhibition or sale was in Paris in 1926. The buyer was Herbert L. May, husband of Saidie May until their separation in 1924. Saidie May was an important donor of paintings and other objects to the Baltimore Museum of Art.
On September 6, Potomack issued a press release announcing the upcoming sale and explaining the mysterious provenance and discovery of the painting. The release was sent to major news organizations, to The Baltimore Museum of Art and to international Renoir specialists. Since the press release, there has been worldwide media coverage of the painting and the mystery of its whereabouts since 1926.
Washington Post reporter Ian Shapira undertook a probing investigation into the whereabouts of the painting since 1926. While doing research in the Museum’s library archives on Tuesday, September 25, Shapira discovered a list of paintings from Saidie A. May on loan to the Museum from 1937 that included the Renoir painting. After Shapira notified Museum officials of his finding, they did an internal investigation of their art collection files and found a loan record indicating that the Renoir painting was stolen in 1951.
On Wednesday, September 26, 2012, the Museum called and advised Potomack that they had a record indicating the painting was stolen while on loan to the Museum in 1951, although there is no known police report. Elizabeth Wainstein, owner of The Potomack Company, immediately notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation of this development that afternoon. A federal investigation is now in progress.
Decision to Withdraw the Painting:
At this time, many questions remain about the fate of the painting after it was loaned to the museum in 1937 and the ownership of the painting then and now. Given these questions, Potomack and the consignor have decided to withdraw the painting from the September 29 sale until any questions about its ownership are resolved.
“Potomack is relieved this came to light in a timely manner as we do not want to sell any item without clear title,” said Elizabeth Wainstein. “Our objective in conducting a sale is always to ensure fairness and finality both for the consignor and for the buying public. Postponing the sale of the Renoir painting is the best way of achieving that objective in this case.”
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