French Pediatrician Concedes Inherited Pissarro Painting

The work by Pissarro, which depicts a shepherdess, on display at the University of Oklahoma in 2014. (AP)
The work by Pissarro, which depicts a shepherdess, on display at the University of Oklahoma in 2014. (AP)
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French Pediatrician Concedes Inherited Pissarro Painting

The work by Pissarro, which depicts a shepherdess, on display at the University of Oklahoma in 2014. (AP)
The work by Pissarro, which depicts a shepherdess, on display at the University of Oklahoma in 2014. (AP)

After a long, fierce judicial battle, Dr. Léone-Noëlle Meyer surprised art circles Wednesday, and conceded a painting by Camille Pissarro, leaving it to the University of Oklahoma.

Pissarro, one of the most prominent Neo-Impressionists, was born in 1830, in the Antillean Creole Islands, which was a Danish colony. He lived in France, and held its citizenship until his death in Paris, in 1903.

Léone-Noëlle Meyer, 81, is a renowned pediatrician in France, and an art curator. She was adopted as a child by Raoul Meyer, founder of Gallery Lafayette in Paris, and she inherited his fortune after his death.

Raoul had managed to flee to the United States after hiding the paintings he owned in a large metal safe. Like many other rich French Jews, his family's properties were looted in 1941, during the organized campaign launched by the Nazi occupation forces. Many valuable artworks were taken to Germany at the time, and Pissarro's painting titled "Shepherdess Bringing in Sheep" was among them.

After the end of the war, and the liberation of Paris in 1945, Raoul returned to Europe, and sought to recover his properties. He managed to locate many of them, but the place of the disputed painting remained unknown.

"I decided to concede all my rights in the painting, including the right to property," Léone-Noëlle Meyer said in a statement, adding that she led a long battle in the United States, and France because her father worked hard to recover the painting throughout his life. But the artistic circles in France didn't understand the reasons behind the surprising decision, and many were disappointed as the disputed painting was supposed to be displayed at Musée d'Orsay for modern art, in Paris.

Pissarro drew the painting in 1886; it was owned by Raoul before it was looted from his house.

In 1951, the painting appeared in Switzerland, and he rushed to claim it. However, the Swiss courts rejected the lawsuit, saying the five-year term to claim looted properties ended. In 1957, the painting remerged in the United States, this time with a New York-based gallery owner involved in previous cases related to paintings stolen from Jewish houses.

The painting was also owned by a US couple from Oklahoma, who decided to donate their art collection, in 2000, to the University of Oklahoma's Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art.

In 2012, Léone-Noëlle found a picture of the painting online, and went to courts to recover it. But the journey was long, and after years of legal disputes, the two parties agreed that the French pediatrician is the owner of the painting, but it shall be exchanged every three years between Paris and Oklahoma. The judge also forced the heiress to waive the painting before she dies to a decent art foundation that preserves valuable artworks.

The painting was set to be displayed first at the Musée d'Orsay, but its curators hid it, and refused the exchange between two continents.

The University of Oklahoma refused leaving the painting to Paris, and went to court. In February, an American judge requested Léone-Noëlle to drop the lawsuit, or to pay a $3 million fine. But she refused to back down.

The French court decided to put the painting under judicial custody. Then, Léone-Noëlle decided suddenly to concede the painting, which will be returned to the US in July. According to the heiress' lawyer, the University of Oklahoma can now do whatever it wants with the artwork.



Australian Hiker Found Alive after Surviving for Two Weeks on Berries and Muesli Bars

A general view of Cooma Hospital where hiker Hadi Nazari was transferred to for a health check in Cooma, New South Wales, Australia, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
A general view of Cooma Hospital where hiker Hadi Nazari was transferred to for a health check in Cooma, New South Wales, Australia, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
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Australian Hiker Found Alive after Surviving for Two Weeks on Berries and Muesli Bars

A general view of Cooma Hospital where hiker Hadi Nazari was transferred to for a health check in Cooma, New South Wales, Australia, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
A general view of Cooma Hospital where hiker Hadi Nazari was transferred to for a health check in Cooma, New South Wales, Australia, 08 January 2025. (EPA)

An Australian student missing for two weeks near the country's tallest mountain was found on Wednesday, after surviving by foraging for berries, drinking water from a creek and finding two muesli bars left behind by other hikers, police said.

Hadi Nazari, a 23-year-old university student from Melbourne, went missing from his group of friends on December 26 in the Kosciuszko National Park.

Nazari was found on Wednesday afternoon by a group of hikers who alerted the authorities, police in the state of New South Wales said.

“This is the fourteenth day we've been looking for him and for him to come out and be in such good spirits and in such great condition, it’s incredible," NSW Police Inspector Josh Broadfoot said.

The student was in "really good spirits" with no significant injuries, he added.

More than 300 people had searched for Nazari across rugged bushland, police said. The national park is home to the 2,228 meter (7,310 foot) Mount Kosciuszko.