Auctions A Monumental Munch Painting, Hidden From the Nazis in a Barn, Will Hit the Auction Block at Sotheby's

The large-scale painting, which has a remarkable history, is expected to fetch between $15 and $25 million.

Vivienne Chow, January 17, 2023

Edvard Munch, Dance on the Beach (Reinhardt Frieze). Courtesy of Sotheby's.

A 13-foot-long painting by Edvard Munch that survived World War II is set to hit the auction block on March 1 at Sotheby's modern and contemporary art evening sale in London, with a presale expectation between £12 million to £20 million ($15 million to $25 million). Dance on the Beach was hidden in a barn from the Nazis alongside a version of The Scream, and it has been 89 years since the work last appeared in the market.

The sale of the storied painting was made possible thanks to a restitution settlement agreement between heirs of the artist's friend, Thomas Olsen, a Norwegian shipping businessman, and heirs of a patron, Curt Glaser, an art historian in Berlin in the 1930s who was the owner of the painting from 1912 until 1933. When he had to flee the Nazis, he was forced to sell the work, which was then acquired by Olsen in 1934; it has been in the Olsen family's collection since then. It was understood that sale proceeds will be divided by the two families. Both Glaser and Olsen had personal relations with Munch at the time, and the artist painted their wives, Elsa Glaser and Henrietta Olsen.

The journey of Dance on the Beach follows a similar trajectory of Summer Day or Embrace on the Beach (The Linde Frieze), which also changed hands from Glaser to Olsen over the course of history. It sold for more than $22 million (including fees) in a 2021 Sotheby's sale in London. Currently, Munch's auction record stands at $119.9 million, which was achieved in 2012 at a Sotheby's New York auction for the sale of The Scream, a pastel on board from 1895, to American financier Leon Black. It was sold by Petter Olsen, Thomas Olsen's son.

Sketch of Elsa and Curt Glaser by Munch - drawn in 1913. Courtesy of Sotheby's.

Dance on the Beach was originally commissioned in 1906 by Max Reinhardt, a renowned film and theater director who was said to be greatly influenced of Munch; the painting became part of what is now known as "The Reinhardt Frieze," at the director's theater in Berlin. It belongs to one of the 12 canvases located on the theater's upper level that intended to be an immersive installation of, in Munch's words, "images from the modern psyche" for audiences making way to a performance at the theater.

The work that is offered at the Sotheby's sale is the only one from this series available in the market, while the rest of them are all in museum collections in Germany, with nine in Nationalgalerie in Berlin, one in Hamburger Kunsthalle, and one in Museum Folkwang in Essen. The painting depicts two of the Norwegian master's heartbreaking great loves, Tulla Larsen and Millie Thaulow, in the foreground.

Glaser, who was the director of the Berlin State Art Library and the artist's biographer, acquired the work in 1912 when the theater was refurbished and the frieze was split up. But the art historian and curator was then persecuted by the Nazis because of his Jewish background, and was forced sell the work in 1933 when he fled Germany. An exhibition of Glaser's collection is currently being held at the Kunstmuseum Basel.

Several months later, the painting surfaced in the market in an auction in Oslo in 1934 and was acquired by Olsen, who was also a neighbor of Munch. Dance on the Beach had appeared in the first class lounge of one of Olsen's cruise liners traveling between Oslo and Newcastle in 1939.

Olsen took it down when Britain declared war on Germany and brought all his Munch paintings, including Dance on the Beach and The Scream, to a barn in the Norwegian forest. Dance on the Beach has been in the hands of the Olsen family since then.

"This exceptional painting is made all the more special due to its extraordinary provenance, a history that has unfolded since it was painted 115 years ago," said Lucian Simmons, Sotheby's vice-chairman and worldwide head of restitution, in a statement. "We are proud to play a part in the painting's next chapter."


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Vivienne Chow London Correspondent

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artnet AG published this content on 17 January 2023 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 17 January 2023 16:19:06 UTC.