A Virginia auction house on Thursday
canceled the sale of a Renoir painting bought at a flea market for $7 after
signs the work was stolen from the Baltimore Museum of Art decades ago.
The painting "Paysage Bords de
Seine" by Pierre-Auguste Renoir was to have gone under the hammer on
Saturday but ownership questions halted the sale, said Lucie Holland, a
spokeswoman for Potomack Co, the Alexandria, Virginia, auctioneer.
"The rest of the auction will go on,
but the Renoir has been withdrawn," she said.
A Virginia woman bought the signed French
Impressionist painting at a West Virginia flea market a year or two ago, hoping
the frame would be of some use.
She ignored the work until it turned up
again while housecleaning and had it appraised by Potomack in July. The auctioneers
verified it as a Renoir and estimated its worth at $75,000 to $100,000.
The Baltimore Museum of Art told Potomack
on Wednesday that its records indicated "Paysage Bords de Seine," or
"Landscape on the Banks of the Seine," was stolen while on loan to
the museum in 1951, the auction house said.
Potomack told the FBI and a federal probe
is under way. There is no known police report on the theft.
BOUGHT IN PARIS
The Renoir came to the Baltimore museum
through one of its leading benefactors, collector Saidie May. Her family bought
the painting from the Bernheim-Jeune gallery in Paris in 1926.
The Washington Post found records in the
museum's library on Tuesday that showed May had lent the paintings and other
works to the museum in 1937, Potomack said.
After the newspaper told it of the
findings, the Baltimore museum checked its files and found a loan record
showing the Renoir had been stolen on November 17, 1951. What happened to it
after the theft is unknown.
Doreen Bolger, the museum director, said
the museum's probe into what happened to the painting was in early stages but
was centered on May.
She died in May 1951 and the art collection
was willed to the museum. As its ownership was going through legal transfer,
the painting was stolen while still listed as on loan.
"At this point we just want to make
sure that the painting winds up where it belongs and that we provide all the
information we can to law enforcement about this issue," Bolger said.
Potomack said the painting had not turned
up when it checked London's Art Loss Register, a database of stolen and lost
art. It also consulted the FBI's art theft website to confirm it was not listed
as stolen.
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