:"Adele Bloch-Bauer I," Gustav Klimt's iconlike portrait of a
Viennese society beauty whose perfect oval face floats above a
glimmering pool of gold, went on public display on July 13 at New
York's Neue Galerie, where it remains through September 18.
Thought to be the world's most expensive painting, the Jugendstil
masterwork completed in 1907 has already been compared by some to
both Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" and Picasso's "Les
Demoiselles d'Avignon" in importance. The Los Angeles
Times called the painting a "destination work - the kind one
travels just to see" when it was shown at the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art this spring. The Neue Galerie is hoping that New
Yorkers and other visitors from around the world will agree.
Accompanying "Adele Bloch-Bauer I" - which is in Klimt's much
sought-after Golden Style, inspired by the artist's 1903 visit to
the Byzantine mosaics in Ravenna, Italy - are four other
paintings by Klimt (1862-1918), among them three landscapes
rendered in the fractured, densely patterned style for which the
artist is known.
All five were commissioned by Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, a wealthy
art collector who fled Austria in 1938, leaving the paintings
behind. Two of the canvases, along with hundreds of preparatory
drawings, depict Bloch-Bauer's young wife, who died a decade
after she was painted, willing her share of the couple's estate
to her husband. Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer died in Switzerland in
1945, leaving the paintings to his niece Maria Altmann and her
two siblings. In 1923, two years before her death and 15` years
before the Nazis annexed Austria, Adele Bloch-Bauer expressed a
wish that the paintings eventually go to the Austrian state. The
preference was not legally binding, courts in both the United
States and Austria ultimately concluded.
"These paintings stolen from Jewish homes are the last
prisoners of World War II. I believe more art will be returned
to its rightful owners," said art collector and Neue Galerie
founder Ronald Lauder, who purchased "Adele Bloch-Bauer II" in
June for the museum. Left, Neue Galerie director Renee Price.
Seated, Maria Altmann, Adele Bloch-Bauer's niece.
At the center of a lengthy restitution dispute, the
Bloch-Bauer paintings spent most of the past 60 years at the
Belvedere, an early Eighteenth Century Viennese palace housing the
Austrian national collection of Baroque through Twentieth Century
Art.
In January 2006, after the US Supreme Court decided in favor of
the Bloch-Bauer family and an Austrian panel unanimously upheld
the decision, the paintings were awarded to 90-year-old Maria
Altmann, who has lived in Los Angeles for the past half century,
and her heirs.
Last month, Ronald S. Lauder - the cosmetics tycoon, art
collector and former ambassador to Austria - bought "Adele
Bloch-Bauer I" for the Neue Gallery, the museum of modern
Austrian and German art and design that he founded in Manhattan
with the late dealer and collector Serge Sabarsky. The price of
the painting, which sold privately in a transaction brokered by
Christie's, was reportedly $135 million, surpassing the $104.1
million paid at Sotheby's in 2004 for Picasso's "Boy With A
Pipe."
"I was a teenager in Vienna when I first saw 'Adele,'" said Neue
Galerie director Renee Price. "It's a great painting and Adele
was a great patron of the arts. She believed very strongly in
Gustav Klimt. I believe this is what Adele would have wanted for
her art." Price acknowledged the efforts of those who helped
bring the paintings to the United States, singling out for
special mention Hubertus Czernin, a Viennese journalist who,
researching the case for The Boston Globe, found documents
supporting the Bloch-Bauer family's position.
"These paintings stolen from Jewish homes are the last prisoners
of World War II. I believe more art will be returned to its
rightful owners," said Lauder, a champion of Jewish causes who
first who met Maria Altmann nearly a decade ago.
"Adele was a woman of the future who lived in the past. She
surrounded herself with people of science and art," said Altmann,
recalling turn-of-the-century intellectual life in Vienna, a city
that produced Sigmund Freud, Gustav Mahler, Arnold Schoenberg and
Ludwig Wttgenstein.

"Adele Bloch-Bauer II" by Gustav Klimt, 1912. Oil on canvas, 74
3/4 by 47 1/4 inches. Estates of Ferdinand and Adele
Bloch-Bauer.
"I remember Adele quite well. She always wore a long white
dress and carried a long cigarette holder," added Adele's niece,
who was born into the wealthy Viennese family in 1916. In 1999,
Altmann engaged attorney E. Randol Schoenberg, grandson of Austrian
composer Arnold Schoenberg and a partner in Burris & Schoenberg
in Los Angeles, to represent her efforts to recover the paintings,
a fight that continued for seven years. The family later retained
art attorney Steven Thomas of Irell & Manella in Los Angeles.
His efforts helped lead to the Klimt exhibitions in Los Angeles and
New York as well as the Neue Galerie transaction.
The Neue Galerie's gain was the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art's loss.
"We put together a substantial offer but it wasn't enough to buy
all five works. The paintings are here at the Neue Galerie
through September, four of them for sale," Stephanie Barron,
LACMA's senior curator of modern art, told Antiques and The
Arts Weekly.
Of the display, which visitors on both coasts have found
provocative and deeply affecting, Barron said, "It represents the
best and the worst of the Twentieth Century. The paintings are
the best; the fact that they were stolen, the worst."
Contacted by Antiques and The Arts Weekly, Christie's
spokesman Bendetta Roux declined comment on the status of
negotiations on the remaining paintings. Nevertheless, for some
fortunate buyer, "Adele Bloch-Bauer II," a 1912 portrait in
translucent orchid, violet, periwinkle and teal, is only slightly
less compelling than its gilded counterpart.
Housed in a 1914 Carrere & Hastings mansion once owned by Mrs
Cornelius Vanderbilt III, the Neue Gallery is at 1048 Fifth
Avenue at 86th Street. For information, 212-628-6200 or
www.neuegalerie.org.