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Peggy Guggenheim's descendants claim 'moral duty' in legal row over priceless art collection

Descendants of art collector Peggy Guggenheim complain museum is acting against her wishes

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The art collector poses with paintings in New York in 1942. Photo: AP

The descendants of famous heiress and art collector Peggy Guggenheim have gone to court in a battle over how her sumptuous collection of works is managed in an 18th-century palace on Venice's Grand Canal.

At the tender age of 13, Peggy Guggenheim inherited unimaginable wealth when her metal magnate father Benjamin went down on the Titanic, money she used to collect and display contemporary art.

After amassing a collection including works from - among others - Cocteau, Picasso, Miro, Matisse and Salvador Dali - she bought the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni on the Venice Grand Canal and began to display the priceless pieces.

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As she neared her death in 1979, she handed over the palace and the collection of 326 works to the Solomon Guggenheim Foundation based in New York and run at the time by her cousin Hardy Guggenheim.

But now, one of Peggy's grandsons, Sandro Rumney, has launched a court battle over how the collection is managed, calling for it to be restored to its original configuration.

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Lawyer Olivier Morice said on Tuesday it was about "respecting the wishes of Peggy Guggenheim to see the collection intact".

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