Serena (Szeréna) Pulitzer Lederer (20 May 1867 in – 27 March 1943 ) was an Austro-Hungarian art collector and the spouse of the industrial magnate August Lederer, close friend of Gustav Klimt and instrumental in the constitution of the collection of Klimt's art pieces.

Serena Pulitzer Lederer

Early life edit

Born in Budapest into a wealthy Jewish family (grandniece of the U.S. journalist Joseph Pulitzer), Serena was known for being a beauty in her youth and later a Grande Dame. She married on 5 June 1892 at the Rabbinat of Pest, August Lederer. The family was resident of Raab (Győr), in the Bartensteingasse n° 8 in Vienna and at the castle Ledererschlössel in Weidlingau.

Art edit

As early as 1888, Gustav Klimt made a first miniature portrait of the young and then unmarried Serena Lederer for his work "Audience Room in the Old Burgtheater".[1] In Vienna, one room of the flat was dedicated to Klimt works. The painting of Szeréna Lederer done in 1899 was the origin of a close friendship. On Klimt's recommendation, in 1912, Egon Schiele was introduced to the Lederer family and became friends with Erich Lederer, the youngest son. Szeréna Lederer was instrumental in the collection of Klimt's work. There are portraits of her mother Charlotte Pulitzer,[2] her daughter Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt [3] and herself by the artist.[4] It has been suggested Elisabeth was the biological daughter of Lederer and Klimt.[5]

According to son Erich Lederer (1896–1985), the residence had been furnished by the Wiener Werkstätte founded by Josef Hoffmann and Koloman Moser in Vienna in 1903. The furnishings had been entrusted to Eduard Josef Wimmer-Wisgrill[6]


Nazi persecution edit

The Lederer collection was confiscated from Serena in 1940 and she fled to Budapest, where she died three years later. The Gestapo transferred the collection to Immendorf Castle, but the castle was set on fire in May, 1945 so that it would not fall into the hands of the Allies and some artworks in the collection were destroyed.[4][7] However some of the artworks reappeared after the war.[8] The Lederer's son Erich and his wife Elisabeth took refuge in Switzerland.[9]

Restitution claims for looted art edit

After the war, 459 works by Gustav Klimt and 77 by Egon Schiele were returned to the Lederers, however most of the artworks were not found. Works that were recovered, however, could not be moved out of Austria, which forbade the Lederer family from exporting Klimt's masterpiece "Beethoven Frieze" to Switzerland.[9] [10] In 2018, the Lederer heirs went to court in Switzerland to attempt to oblige a Swiss art dealer Galerie Kornfeld to answer questions about artworks from the Lederer collection that had reappeared after the war with Wolfgang, Hildebrand et Cornelius Gurlitt.[9] Also in 2018, it was discovered that Austrian authorities had restituted one of the Lederer's Klimts, Apple Tree II, to the wrong family.[11][12]

One of the paintings that Serena Lederer had owned, Klimt's Apple Tree II, was restituted to the wrong family after an investigation by the Art Restitution Advisory Board that mistakenly confused the Klimt with another different painting.[13]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Tobias Natter, Gerbert Frodl (Hsg.): Klimt und die Frauen (Ausstellungskatalog), Dumont Köln 2000 ISBN 3-8321-7271-8

References edit

  1. ^ Natter, Tobias G. (2003). Die Welt von Klimt, Schiele und Kokoschka. Sammler und Mäzene (in German). DuMont Buchverlag. pp. 111ff. ISBN 978-3832172589.
  2. ^ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Klimt_-_Portrait_of_Charlotte_Pulitzer_1915.jpg [bare URL image file]
  3. ^ "Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt".
  4. ^ a b Gustav Klimt (1899). "Serena Pulitzer Lederer (1867–1943)". work of art: image, references, provenance, notes of history. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  5. ^ Geddes, John (13 August 2020). "The long, dark past behind the National Gallery's latest acquisition". Maclean's. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  6. ^ Nebehay, Christian M. (1986). Gustav Klimt Egon Schiele und die Familie Lederer (in German). Bern: Kornfeld Verlag AG. p. 11. ISBN 978-3857730160.
  7. ^ David Rapp (2004-02-13). "Stealing beauty". Haaretz.
  8. ^ "Nazi Confiscated Art Issues" (PDF). p. 499. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 February 2021.
  9. ^ a b c "La justice genevoise condamne une maison de vente aux enchères". Tribune de Genève (in French). 2018-04-10. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  10. ^ "Klimt restitution claim puts Austria's art law to the test". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  11. ^ "Austria returns wrong Klimt to wrong family". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 2018-11-13. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  12. ^ Chazan, David. "Bernard Arnault in talks to offer compensation for Gustav Klimt painting looted by Nazis". lootedart.com. Retrieved 2023-11-14. Austria had handed over the painting to the Stiasny family in 2001 because it had been confused with another Klimt landscape, Roses Under the Trees, which Stiasny owned before the Second World War. She sold it under duress for a fraction of its value in 1938 after Germany annexed Austria. Four years later she was murdered in a Nazi death camp. Apple Tree II should have been returned to another Austrian Jewish family, the Lederers, whom the Nazis seized it from
  13. ^ "Austria returns wrong Klimt to wrong family". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 2018-11-13. Retrieved 2024-02-26.