-
US stocks cut losses on Netanyahu war comments as energy prices soar again
-
Forest beat Midtjylland on penalties to reach Europa League quarters
-
Netanyahu says Iran decimated as Tehran warns of 'zero restraint' in energy attacks
-
Salvadoran anti-corruption lawyer jailed to 'silence her', husband says
-
California to rename Cesar Chavez Day after sex abuse claims
-
Yazidi woman tells French court of rape, slavery and escape from IS
-
New FIFA ruling boosts prospects for women coaches
-
Megan Jones to captain England in Women's Six Nations
-
Trump says told Netanyahu not to attack Iran gas fields
-
MLS reveals shortened 2027 campaign details
-
FIFA planning for World Cup to 'go ahead as scheduled' amid Iran uncertainty
-
Braves outfielder Profar's full MLB season ban upheld: report
-
Mideast war exposing Europe's reliance on Gulf flights, airlines warn
-
Ghalibaf: Iran's new strongman running war effort
-
UN shipping body urges 'safe maritime corridor' in Gulf
-
Venezuelan student freed after months in US immigration custody
-
Trump to Japan PM: 'Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?'
-
US mulls lifting sanctions on Iranian oil at sea despite war on Tehran
-
IMF raises concern over global inflation, output over Iran war
-
Middle East war weighs on global trade outlook: WTO
-
Cunningham out for NBA Pistons with collapsed lung
-
Belarus frees 250 political prisoners in US-brokered deal
-
Iran attacks on gas and oil refineries heighten fears over war fallout
-
Fernandez 'completely committed' to Chelsea insists Rosenior
-
Call to add Nazi camps to UNESCO list
-
England cricket chiefs to front up to media over Ashes flop
-
'Miracle': Europe reconnects with lost spacecraft
-
Nigeria 'challenged by terrorism', president says on UK state visit
-
Woltemade deployed too deep to be dangerous at Newcastle, says Nagelsmann
-
Wimbledon expansion plan gets legal boost
-
EU summit fails to rally Orban behind stalled Ukraine loan
-
New Morocco coach praises 'well-deserved' Cup of Nations decision
-
Senegal to appeal CAF Africa Cup of Nations decision
-
'Mixing things up': Nagelsmann goes for flexibility in new Germany squad
-
Record-setter Hodgkinson hopes 'fourth time lucky' at world indoors
-
Atletico target Romero says his focus on Spurs' survival bid
-
Karalis hits prime form to threaten Duplantis surprise
-
Freshly returned Mbappe leads France squad for Brazil, Colombia friendlies
-
US earns its lowest-ever score on freedom index
-
Europe's super elite teach English clubs a Champions League lesson
-
What we know about the UK's deadly meningitis outbreak
-
Karl handed Germany debut as Musiala misses out with injury
-
What cargo ships are passing Hormuz strait?
-
Bank of England holds interest rate amid Middle East war
-
Energy prices soar, Iran and US trade threats after Qatar gas hit
-
'Surreal' for F1 world champion Norris to have Tussauds waxwork
-
Iran hangs three men in first executions over January protests
-
North Korea, Philippines qualify for 2027 Women's World Cup
-
Man Utd boss Carrick expects hard test against resolute Bournemouth
-
Oil prices surge, stocks sink on energy shock fears
'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war
A man walked into a Viennese gallery one day in the summer of 2023 looking to sell a Gustav Klimt painting. The person who greeted him thought it was a joke, and gently sent him on his way.
But when the owner of the W&K gallery was told what had happened, he ran down the street after the man.
Ebi Kohlbacher is an expert on the great Austrian symbolist artist and knew some Klimt paintings had been lost.
He caught up with the man, who showed him a photo of a canvas lost for eight decades -- a portrait of Prince William Nii Nortey Dowuona, an African aristocrat who is known to have met Klimt and posed for him.
It is "one of the rare paintings of a black person in European art created by a great artist", Kohlbacher told AFP.
Experts say Dowuona was the head of a group of the Ga people from near Accra in Ghana who were part of a notorious "human zoo" exhibition of African village life that drew huge crowds in Vienna in 1897.
The painting vanished after World War II, having been owned by a wealthy Jewish Austrian family, the Kleins.
"We had to determine where the work came from without a trace of doubt," Kohlbacher told AFP.
Another expert Alfred Weidinger helped confirm the portrait was genuine and mapped out its history.
The Kleins, who were wine dealers, acquired the painting after Klimt's death in 1918. They fled Austria after the Nazi annexation of in 1938, entrusting the painting to a woman, who later moved to Hungary.
But when the communists took power in Budapest in 1949, the woman ignored all the family's pleas to give it back and the painting vanished from the public eye.
It had four known owners in Hungary between 1988 and 2023, when it was taken back to Austria for expert analysis after Hungary granted an export licence.
- Klimt 'respected' him -
Klimt's work now sells for astronomical sums -- his "Lady with a Fan" sold for $108 million in 2023 -- and Weidinger hailed it as one of the artist's "prominent" works.
The oil painting's floral elements, which later became one of Klimt's characteristic traits, show "a key phase in the evolution of his artistic language", Weidinger said.
"This transition phase is defined in particular by the tension between the meticulously detailed and naturalist figure" of the prince and the "vibrant, almost expressionist rendering of the background", he added.
Kohlbacher said Klimt must have known and respected the prince.
"It is obvious that the painting radiates his admiration," he said.
The prince led a delegation of 120 Africans who travelled through the Austro-Hungarian empire and posed for six months in a show that was visited by up to 10,000 people a day.
The painting marked a turning point in the European perception of Africans, Weidinger said.
Despite problematic colonial prejudices and the obvious "voyeurism" of the show, the Africans "were no longer separated from the public", the expert said.
"The Viennese bourgeoisie took them to cafes and shopping, and showed them the local monuments," he added.
- Enter Viktor Orban's Hungary -
But the tale has another twist thanks to Hungary's new-found passion for the lost African prince.
The last owner of the painting is allowed to sell it under an agreement signed in line with the 1998 Washington Principles for the return of assets seized from Holocaust victims.
He has a confidential deal with the descendants of Ernestine Klein, the original owner who died in 1973.
But Budapest will have none of that as it insists the export licence was not valid, arguing that an item of such value should never have left the country.
While the W&K gallery hopes that Hungary will respect the Washington Principles, the Vienna prosecutor confirmed to AFP he has received a seizure order from Budapest, which wants the "Black Klimt" back.
P.Anderson--BTB