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Art In The News
Liz Taylor Gets To Keep Her Van Gogh
Bloomberg News reports that Actress Elizabeth Taylor can keep a Vincent van Gogh painting thought to have belonged to a Jewish woman who was forced to sell it before fleeing Nazi Germany in 1939.
Mauthner's heirs claimed that the painting was probably confiscated by Nazis and asked for the painting, valued at US$10-15 million, to be returned. Elizabeth Taylor said she had never seen information suggesting the painting was stolen. Her father, Francis Taylor, bought the picture on his daughter's behalf at a Sotheby's auction in London in 1963 for 92,000 British pounds -- about $257,000 at the time.
The actress's lawyers agreed that the Nazis forced Margarete Mauthner to give up her job, pension and home, but said there wasn't any information on whether she sold the painting or whether it was confiscated.
Source: Bloomberg
Charles's Royal Mistress Goes On Sale
A 17th century portrait commissioned by King Charles II of England goes on sale in July with a price tag of around US$4 million. The portrait by Dutch artist Peter Lely shows a scantily clad English royal mistress lounging on pillows and was painted in the hedonistic days of the English Restoration.
The painting used to hang in the royal bedchamber, behind a secret sliding panel so that only the King could see it, and was originally thought to be a portrait of the famous Nell Gwyn. But the accuracy of that claim has always been doubted and many experts believed that it is, in fact, a portrait of Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castelmaine, one of King Charles's earlier mistresses who was considered to be one of the most beautiful women of her day.
Although Barbara Villiers wielded huge influence over the King, her extravagance and promiscuity led to Charles abandoning her in favor of Nell Gwyn.
Reuters reports that the painting is going on sale at Christie's on July 5. A spokesman for the auction house claims that the scales are tipping in favor of the portrait being of Barbara Villiers because of the eyes, the color of the hair and the date it was painted.
Source: Reuters |