In a detailed formal opinion, the Michigan attorney general said the art collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts is held in charitable trust for the people of Michigan and could not be sold by the city to help settle some of its billions of dollars in debts.
The attorney general, Bill Schuette, said in a statement released by his office on Thursday that he recognized the serious financial hardships that the city faces.
But, he said, âThe art collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts is held by the city of Detroit in charitable trust for the people of Michigan, and no piece in the collection can thus be sold, conveyed or transferred to satisfy City debts or obligations.â
The statement was quoted in several Detroit media outlets and linked to by the mlive.com Website.
The Detroit Free Press said the opinion did not settle the legal question of whether the art would ever be sold.
But his action could provide important protection for the museumâs extensive collection if any decision were ever to go to court.
Detroitâs emergency manager Kevyn Orr is exploring ways to restructure the cityâs $15 billion - $17 billion in debt. Mr. Orr has said he has no plans to sell the art, but nevertheless has a responsibility to work out what the city owns, including the museumâs masterpieces. On Friday, Mr. Orr laid out his plan for tackling Detroitâs staggering debt, asking some of the cityâs creditors to accept pennies on the dollar as he opened discussions that could determine whether the city is headed to bankruptcy court or not.
The Detroit Institute of Arts, founded in 1885, has a collection of more than 60,000 works, including a Van Gogh 1887 self-portrait; âThe Wedding Danceâ by Pieter Bruegel the Elder; and âMadonna and Childâ by Giovanni Bellini.
âIn Michigan, we not only appreciate our cultural treasures, we guard them zealously in charitable trust for all state residents, present and future,â Mr. Schuette said in the statement.