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Newly-Restituted Kandinsky Masterpiece

Sotheby’s

KANDINSKY’S 1910 MURNAU MIT KIRCHE II – One of the Most Important Works by the Artist Ever to Appear at Auction – To Star at Sotheby’s London this March

A Jewel of the Celebrated Stern Collection in 1920s Berlin, The Recently Restituted Painting will be Offered with an Estimate

In the Region of $45 Million

This March in London, Sotheby’s will offer for sale one of the greatest paintings by Kandinsky ever to come to market. Dating from a transformative moment in Kandinsky’s career, Murnau mit Kirche II (1910) encapsulates the very beginnings of the revolutionary abstract language that would underpin the rest of Kandinsky’s career – and set the next generation of artists on a new path. Executed on an impressive scale, in the near-square format favoured by avant-garde contemporaries from Monet to Klimt, and with a rich palette of contrasting hues, the newly-restituted painting has a remarkable history.

Soon after it was painted, the work was acquired by Johanna Margarete Stern (née Lippmann, 1874–1944) and Siegbert Samuel Stern (1864–1935). Co-founders of a successful textile business, Johanna Margarete and Siegbert were at the heart of the famously glittering cultural life of 1920s Berlin, with a social circle that included Thomas Mann, Franz Kafka and Albert Einstein. Together they built an impressive art collection consisting of well over 100 paintings and drawings, the scope of which reflected their multifaceted tastes and interests, ranging from Dutch Old Masters to much more recent, ground-breaking works by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Lovis Corinth, Odilon Redon, Max Liebermann, Edvard Munch and Max Pechstein.

Everything changed, however, following the rise to power of the Nazis: although Siegbert died of natural causes in 1935, Johanna Margarete was eventually forced to flee Germany, in spite of which she still did not escape the Holocaust. In the course of these terrible events, the Sterns’ spectacular art collection was dispersed.

Identified just under ten years ago on the walls of the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, where it had been hanging since 1951, Kandinsky’s Murnau mit Kirche II was recently restituted to the descendants of the Stern family. It will now be offered for sale with an estimate in the region of $45 million, with the proceeds to be shared between the thirteen surviving Stern heirs. The sale of the work will also fund further research into the fate of the family’s collection.

Early works by Kandinsky rarely come to the market, with the lion’s share residing in major museum collections across the world. Ahead of its sale in London on 1 March, the painting will be exhibited at Sotheby’s Hong Kong (5-7 February), New York (11-15 February) and London (22 February-1 March).

“Though nothing can undo the wrongs of the past, nor the impact on our family and those who were in hiding – one of whom is still alive – the restitution of this painting that meant so much to our great-grandparents is immensely significant to us, because it is an acknowledgement and partially closes a wound that has remained open over the generations.” The heirs of Johanna Margarete and Siegbert Stern

“Kandinsky’s Murnau period came to define abstract art for future generations, and the appearance of such an important painting – one of the last of this period and scale remaining in private hands – is a major moment for the market and for collectors. Its restitution after so many years allows us finally to reconnect this remarkable painting with its history, and rediscover the place of the Sterns and their collection in the glittering cultural milieu of 1920s Berlin.” Helena Newman, Chairman of Sotheby's Europe and Worldwide Head of Impressionist & Modern Art

“This year marks the 25th anniversary of the conference, held in Washington, D.C., that first established the ground rules for the restitution of art works looted by the Nazis during the Second World War. Since then, Sotheby’s Restitution Department has worked with many heirs and families to reunite them with their stolen property, but the restitution, after so many years, of Kandinsky’s Murnau mit Kirche II to the heirs of Johanna Margarete and Siegbert Stern has been especially resonant and moving, and we are so very glad that the full story will now be told.” Lucian Simmons, Vice Chairman and Sotheby’s Worldwide Head of Restitution

THE STERN FAMILY AND THEIR COLLECTION
Siegbert Stern was a leading entrepreneur and co-founder of the major textiles enterprise Graumann & Stern, head-quartered in a magnificent art nouveau building on Berlin’s Mohrenstrasse.
Surrounded by their splendid collection, Siegbert and his wife Johanna Margarete lived with their four children, Annie, Hilde, Hans and Luise (affectionately referred to as Liesle or Liesel), in a beautiful architect-designed villa in Potsdam / Neubabelsberg, outside Berlin. The family was a close and loving one, as evoked in the many photographs that survive, and in newly-unearthed notes that Siegbert made for his 70th birthday speech.

In addition to their involvement in Berlin’s thriving cultural life, the Sterns were also significant in the Jewish community, and in 1916 helped set up the Jüdisches Volksheim to support Eastern-European Jews living in poverty, an organisation that also served as a source of education and intellectual exchange, with regular visitors including writers and philosophers such as Franz Kafka and Martin Buber.






  • 01.03.2023
    Auktion »
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus »

    Auction: 2 April
    Preview: 31 March – 2 April



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  • KANDINSKY’S 1910 MURNAU MIT KIRCHE II
    KANDINSKY’S 1910 MURNAU MIT KIRCHE II
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • KANDINSKY’S 1910 MURNAU MIT KIRCHE II
    KANDINSKY’S 1910 MURNAU MIT KIRCHE II
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Kandinsky, 'Murnau mit Kirche II' on the walls of the dining room at Villa Stern
    Kandinsky, 'Murnau mit Kirche II' on the walls of the dining room at Villa Stern
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • The Stern Villa in Potsdam, designed by Berlin architect Max Landsberg
    The Stern Villa in Potsdam, designed by Berlin architect Max Landsberg
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Annie Stern and her husband James Vigeveno, who was related to art dealer Jacques Goudstikker
    Annie Stern and her husband James Vigeveno, who was related to art dealer Jacques Goudstikker
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Graumann & Stern Building, Berlin, designed by Otto Rieth
    Graumann & Stern Building, Berlin, designed by Otto Rieth
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus