View into the "workshop" on the occasion of the opening of the Hasso Plattner Collection (2020) by David von BeckerMuseum Barberini
What is provenance research?
Every work of art has an individual history that forms part of its identity. Knowledge of the biographies of works and their history of ownership is an element of every collection history. At the Museum Barberini, too, art historians research the Impressionist masterpieces in the Hasso Plattner Collection in order to reconstruct a record of their origin as complete as possible.
Investigations of this kind have established themselves as an art historical discipline known as provenance research.
View into the "workshop" on the occasion of the opening of the Hasso Plattner Collection (2020) by David von BeckerMuseum Barberini
Why do collections investigate the origin of their works?
Provenance research came into focus as a core responsibility of collection research with the adoption of the “Washington Declaration” in 1998. Its forty-four signatory states, including Germany, obligated themselves to locate the former owners (or their heirs) of works of art confiscated during the Nazi period.
The first step is to identify and publicize such works. The objective is to arrive at a “just and fair solution,” which may constitute the return of the work, compensation, or an amicable agreement.
Provenance research at the Museum Barberini (2020) by David von BeckerMuseum Barberini
How do provenance researchers work?
The investigation begins with the work itself: markings on its reverse often provide important clues. Researchers then consult the collection’s own records such as purchase documents or condition reports and search for the specific object in bibliographical sources, exhibition and auction catalogues, and online databanks. Archival research and the examination of historical documents such as letters and account books is also a fundamental part of provenance research.
The works in the Hasso Plattner Collection are likewise studied in this way in order to produce a continuous record of their “biographies.” Three examples serve to illustrate the results of this work so far:
Claude Monet: The Rose Bushes in the Garden at Montgeron
This work is one of 34 paintings by Claude Monet in the Hasso Plattner Collection. Monet painted it for the textile wholesaler Ernest Hoschedé at the latter’s estate in the Paris suburb of Montgeron.
The Rose Bushes in the Garden at Montgeron (1876) by Claude MonetMuseum Barberini
Hoschedé was one of Monet’s earliest patrons and acquired this picture in 1876. The following year, however, he declared bankruptcy, and in 1878 he was forced to auction his extensive collection of Impressionist art.
As documents prove, the work by Monet was purchased at the auction by the opera singer Jean-Baptiste Faure, who was likewise an early collector of Impressionist paintings.
Backside of Monet's painting "The Rose Bushes in the Garden at Montgeron" (2020)Museum Barberini
Examination of the back of the painting helps provide information about its subsequent fate.
Along with various unknown or unidentifiable numberings, as well as the stamp of an art supply dealer and an unidentified label with a handwritten inscription, an additional label reveals one of the Rose Bushes’ stopovers:
As this label shows, the work was part of the collection of the Argentinian art patron and collector Mercedes Santamarina, who acquired the painting in 1930 at the Galerie Georges Petit in Paris. In 1946, she auctioned it in Buenos Aires in a partial sale of her collection.
The work came into the hands of an unknown owner, but remained in Buenos Aires.
Claude Monet's "Rose Bushes in the Garden at Montgeron" at the Museum Barberini (2020) by Henry BalaszeskulMuseum Barberini
In the 1960s, the painting was sold to an owner in New York or London; in the 1970s, it found its way to Chicago and was finally auctioned in New York in November 2005 with the estate of the collector couple Bettie and Neison Harris.
In April 2010, it was acquired by the Hasso Plattner Collection from a private collector. Since September 2020, it has been on permanent display at the Museum Barberini in Potsdam.
Claude Monet: Still Life with a Honeydew Melon
The tumultuous history of the twentieth century and the Nazi regime had a stronger impact on the history of Claude Monet’s Still Life with a Honeydew Melon.
Still Life with a Honeydew Melon (1879) by Claude MonetMuseum Barberini
Painted in 1879, the work changed hands multiple times within France between 1880 and 1898. In May 1898, it was purchased at auction by the Paris Galerie Durand-Ruel—under the leadership of Paul Durand-Ruel, who had supported the Impressionists from the beginning and whose efforts were largely responsible for their popularity.
After another sale to the American collector Duncan Phillips in 1926, Still Life with a Honeydew Melon was finally purchased by the French art dealer Paul Rosenberg in 1934.
Backside of Monet's painting "Still Life with a Honeydew Melon" (2020)Museum Barberini
Rosenberg was of Jewish descent and emigrated to New York in 1940—but had to leave his collection of Impressionist and modern art behind in France.
The collection was confiscated during World War II, and in September 1941, Still Life with a Honeydew Melon came into the hands of the commander-in-chief of the German Luftwaffe, Hermann Göring.
In April 1942, the work by Monet was transferred to the gallery of Theodor Fischer in Lucerne, Switzerland, in an exchange transaction mediated by the art dealer Hans Wendland.
After the war, the painting was secured in Bern in 1946 and returned to Paul Rosenberg in 1948.
In the 1950s, Paul Rosenberg sold Still Life with a Honeydew Melon.
Claude Monet's "Still Life with a Honeydew Melon" at the Museum Barberini (2020) by David von BeckerMuseum Barberini
In the decades that followed, the work can be traced especially in the US; in 1967, it was acquired by the Kimbell Art Foundation, from whom it was purchased in 1994 by the Frederick A. und Sharon L. Klingenstein Collection. Finally, in June 2019 it was acquired by the Hasso Plattner Collection.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir: The Pear Tree
The Pear Tree by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, on the other hand, is a more typical example of what is often a very lengthy restoration process.
The Pear Tree (1877) by Pierre-Auguste RenoirMuseum Barberini
Renoir painted the work in 1877; five years later, it was acquired from the artist by the Galerie Durand-Ruel. As of the 1920s, the painting had been sold three additional times. In 1928, it was acquired by the Dutch banker and art collector Friedrich Bernhard Eugen “Fritz” Gutmann.
In 1940–41, the Nazis illegally confiscated The Pear Tree from him in the Netherlands. In 1944, Fritz Gutmann and his wife Louise were murdered in concentration camps.
Backside of Renoir's painting "The Pear Tree" (2020)Museum Barberini
Over the course of the decades, the painting was sold a number of times; meanwhile, the children and grandchildren of Fritz Gutmann made efforts to recover the works from his illegally confiscated art collection.
Not until June 2005 were they finally able to reach a settlement agreement with the then owner of The Pear Tree and receive financial compensation.
In 2005 and 2010, the work entered the possession of private collectors, before being acquired by the Hasso Plattner Collection in September 2019.
Museum Barberini, Außenansicht (2019) by Lukas SpörlMuseum Barberini
The Online Collection of the Museum Barberini provides detailed information on the results of the provenance research to date of all 103 works in the Hasso Plattner Collection. Also presented there is information on exhibition history, bibliography, and videos of the museum team discussing the paintings.