Gert-Rudolf Flick
Gert-Rudolf "Muck" Flick is a German art historian and collector, a member of the Flick family of industrialists whose wealth originated with Flick's grandfather, Friedrich Flick, who worked with the Nazis during the Second World War. He is the former publisher of Apollo magazine and is a visiting professor in the history of art at the University of Buckingham. He has written two well-received works on the history of art, Missing Masterpieces and Masters and Pupils.
Early life and family
Gert-Rudolf Flick was born on 29 May 1943 in France to Otto-Ernst Flick and his wife Barbara Raabe. His grandfather was Friedrich Flick, a German industrialist convicted after the Second World War of using slave labour in his factories.He married and divorced first Princess Johanna von Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein. Secondly, he married and divorced Princess Donatella Missikoff of Ossetia with whom he had one son Sebastian. Thirdly, he married Corinne Müller-Vivil, a confectionary heiress, with whom he has one daughter.
Career
Flick has a PhD in law from the University of Munich. He joined the Flick firm in 1971 but with his younger siblings, Friedrich Christian Flick and Dagmar Flick, negotiated a sale of their interests in the firm that was realised in 1975 for a shared 405m marks and an additional negotiated payment of 225m marks later. Flick later made a significant gain on the sale of shares following a change in ownership of the Flick group.In the 1990s, Flick was the publisher of Apollo magazine. He has written two major works on the history of art, a study of Missing Masterpieces, and Masters and Pupils which postulated an apostolic succession of training in European art history. As of 2019, he is a visiting professor in the history of art at the University of Buckingham.