Alphonse Kann

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Photographic portrait of Peter Pitt-Millward, at Alphonse Kann's home, Saint-Germain-en-Laye.

Alphonse Kann (14 March 1870[1] in Vienna 1948 in London) was a prominent French art collector of Jewish heritage. He was a childhood playmate and adult friend of the writer Marcel Proust, who incorporated several of Kann's features into the character Charles Swann (in Swann in Love).[2]

The name Kann, written with double "nn", was said in Paris to be "le plus chic du chic".[2] Known for his discerning taste and shrewd collecting instincts, Kann shocked the art world in 1927 by auctioning off (at the American Art Association, New York City) most of his Old Master collection (including works by Bruegel, Cimabue, Fragonard, Pollaiuolo, Rubens and Tintoretto) in order to concentrate on the acquisition of 19th-century and modern art, which he collected vigorously over the following decade.

Nazi theft

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