The list of restitution claims for art looted by the Nazis or as a result of Nazi persecution is organized by the country in which the paintings were located when the return was requested.
Australia and New Zealand
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Cornelis Bega
Paintings anonymous artists |
Federico Gentili die Giuseppe[1] Claim for restitution to Art Gallery of South Australia in Adelaide |
Restitution in 2000 by compensation.[2] | |
Painting "Head of a Man" previously attributed to Vincent van Gogh | Richard Semmel
Claim for restitution to The National Gallery of Victoria |
No Litigation - Return - Painting remains in museum on 12- month loan[3] | |
Gerard ter Borch Portrait d'une femme avec un éventail Oil painting around 1670 |
Max Emden Collection Claim for restitution to National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne[4] |
in process[5] | |
Macchiaioli Cinq tableaux Milieu du XIXe siècle |
Cino Vitta Collection[6] Claim for restitution to Public Galery of Art, New Zealand, for five paintings in the 'école de Macchiaioli. |
After an amicable settlement in April 1999, three paintings remained in the museum and two were placed in an auction. The proceeds of the sale were divided between the museum and the heirs.[7][8] |
Croatia
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
André Derain, "Still Life With a Bottle," and Maurice de Vlaminick's "Landscape by the Water," which were held by the National Museum of Modern Art, | Dane Reichsmann
request for restitution of art collection seized by the fascist Ustashe regime[9] |
In 2023 three museums restituted artworks to the Reichsmann heirs.[10][11] |
Sweden
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Emil Nolde "Blumengarten (Utenwarf)" | Otto Nathan Deutsch[12] Claim for restitution to Moderna Museet in Stockholm[13][14] |
Settlement in 2009 after six year dispute.[15] The Moderna Museet had purchased the Nolde from the Ketterer Galerie in Lugano without provenance.[16] | |
Austria
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Martin van Heemskerck, Two altar wings with pictures of the donors | Richard Neumann
restitution claim to the city of Krems an der Donau |
In 2007 the descendants of Neumann received back two paintings by "Kremser Schmidt" Martin Johann Schmidt, which had come into the possession of the city of Krems an der Donau illegally through the "Aryanization".[17] | |
Houses by the Sea (Häuser am Meer), 1914, by Egon Schiele | Jenny Steiner, Daisy Hellmann (née Steiner b. in Vienna 22 April 1890 - 5 January 1977)
claim against |
The Leopold Museum settled with Jenny Steiner's heirs, including Daisy's daughter, in 2012[19] | |
Rudolf Alt, Bäume (Skizzenbuchblatt), Bleistiftstudie, rücks. Nachlassstempel, 24,7 × 15,3 cm, Inv.-Nr. II/6218 | Alfred und Valerie Eisler, Vienna
Neue Galerie, Universalmuseum Joanneum, Graz |
Restituted on 26. January 1953 to the heirs of Valerie Eisler[20] | |
Gustav Klimt, Damenbildnis (Portrait Ria Munk III), 1917–18 Oil on canvas, 180.7 x 89.9 cm | Aranka Munk | In 2009 restituted to the rightful heirs of Aranka Munk[21] | |
Four Trees "Vier Bäume"
by Egon Schiele |
Josef and Alice Morgenstern[22]
claim to Österreichische Galerie Belvedere |
In 2020 the Austrian Restitution Advisory Board recommended that "Four Trees" by Egon Schiele be restituted to the Morgenstern heirs.[23] | |
porcelain object | Nathan Eidinger
MAK, Vienna |
In 2014 the advisory board recommended the restitution of several porcelain objects from the MAK to the heirs to Nathan Eidinger[24] | |
gouache by Philippe Berger | Käthe and Maximilian Kellner
Albertina Museum, Vienna |
In 2014 the advisory board recommended the restitution of a gouache by Philippe Berger from the Albertina to the heirs to Maximilian and Käthe Kellner[24] | |
drawing by Adolf Menzel | Leopolodine Mannaberg
Albertina Museum, Vienna |
In 2014 the advisory board recommended the restitution of the advisory board also recommended the restitution a drawing by Adolf Menzel to the heirs to Leopoldine Mannaberg[24] | |
Adolph von Menzel's gouache on paper Stehende Rüstungen (1886) ("Standing Suits of Armour") | Adele Pächter (murdered at the Theresienstadt concentration camp)[25]
Albertina Museum, Vienna |
Restituted by the Albertina Museum to the heirs of Hermann and Adele Pächter in 2014[26] | |
Maiwiese by Emil Nolde | Otto Siegfried Julius | Restituted to the rightful heirs of Otto Siegfried Julius in 2015[24][27] | |
Lesser Ury, Die Näherin, 1883 Oil on canvas, 52 x 42.5 cm | Fritz Loewenthal
Lentos Art Museum in Linz |
Restituted to the rightful heirs of Fritz Loewenthal in 1999[28] | |
Anton Romako, Mädchen mit aufgestütztem Arm (the daughter of the artist), ca.1875 Oil on canvas, 72.5 x 61 cm
Anton Romako, Der Zweikampf (Kämpfende Ritter), Oil on canvas, 110 x 82.5 cm Anton Romako, Lager im Wald (Zigeunerlager), ca. 1879 Oil on canvas, 41 x 32 cm Anton Romako, Mädchen mit Nusskorb (Tochter des Künstlers), ca. 1880 Oil on canvas, 139 x 89.5 cm Anton Romako, Ungarische Puszta (Strohschober in Bálványos), ca. 1880 Oil on canvas, 26.5 x 21.5 cm Anton Romako, Bildnis Karl Schwach, 1854 Oil on canvas, 45.5 x 37 cm |
Oskar Reichel, a medical doctor in Vienna,
heirs' claim against Lentos Art Museum in Linz |
In 2012 restituted to the legal successor of Oskar and Malvine Reichel. The six paintings will continue to be displayed at the LENTOS on permanent loan.[29] | |
Anton Romako | Oskar Reichel, a medical doctor in Vienna,
heirs' claim against Albertina Museum in Vienna[30] |
||
Anton Romako (1832–1889) Lying dog, Watercolour, 23.2 x 32 cm Albertina, Inv. No. 29226 | Armin Reichmann, Albertina Museum in Vienna | In 2012 the restitution committee recommended that the Albertina Museum restitute Romako's Lying Dog to the Reichmann heirs.[31] | |
Adoration of the Magi by Giovanni di Paolo (1460)
and many other paintings[32] |
Oscar Bondy (d. 1946)[33][34][35] | 99 paintings seized from the Bondy collection by Nazis in 1938 in Vienna are said to have been restituted to his widow Elizabeth Bondy after the war in 1948, however this was only part of the collection. There were intensive negotiations with Austrian authorities, and serious issues with locating objects and obtaining export licences, as well as pressure to "donate". The Austrian advisory board was still studying the fate of the Bondy collection in 2021.[36] | |
Egon Schiele, The Portrait of Wally (1912) | Heirs of Lea Bondi Jaray[37]
claim against the Leopold Museum |
After many years of litigation,[38] in 2010, the Leopold Museum agreed to pay a settlement of $19 million to Bondi's heirs[39] | |
Elisabeth Bondy | Elizabeth Bondy, recommendation issued by Austrian advisory board on 27 Oct. 1999[40][41] |
Belgium
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Louis Corinth
Flowers (1913) |
Gustav and Emma Mayer[42]
returned by Royal Museum of Fine Arts of Belgium (KMSKB) |
Looted by the E.R.R., the artwork was recovered by Leo Van Puyvelde after the defeat of the Nazis and transferred to Belgium's Economic Recovery Department which placed it in the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in 1951. It was restituted to the Mayer heirs in February 2022.[43] |
Germany
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Franz Marc
The Foxes Die Füchse, 1913. |
Kurt Grawi (1887–1945)[44]
claim to City of Düsseldorf and the Kunstpalast Museum |
In 2017, Grawi's family demanded the restitution of Marc's painting The Foxes (1913) from Düsseldorf's Kunstpalast. It was decided to restitute in 2021.[45][46] | |
Peasant Girl Without a Hat by artist Wilhelm Leibl | Alexander Lewin[47]
Bremen Museum |
restituted to the heirs in 2009[48] | |
Berlin Street Scene by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner | Alfred Hess[49]
Bruecke Museum in Berlin and City of Berlin |
After initially arguing that financial troubles unrelated to Nazi persecution caused the sale,[50] Berlin restituted the painting to the heirs.[51] | |
drawing 'Felsige Waldlandschaft mit weitem Ausblick' by Isaak Major | Arthur Feldmann[52][53] | Looted, then sold twice at Sotheby's London (in 1946, and 1975), sold to the British Rail Pension Fund, then dealer C. G. Boerner in Düsseldorf who sold it to Kunsthalle Bremen. Identified by the research of Arthur Feldmann's grandson Uri Peled Feldmann. Restituted and purchased back in 2016[55] | |
Hans von Marées
Husband with a Yellow Hat (Selbstbildnus mit gelbem Hut) |
Max Silberberg[56][57]
claim to Berlin National Gallery |
The Berlin National Gallery which had acquired Hans von Marées' Husband with a Yellow Hat at the forced Graupe auction of 1935,[58] restituted the painting to the Silberberg heir in July 1999 and then bought it back the same year. | |
Portrait of Max John, painting by Otto Dix (1920) | Fritz Glaser[59]
claim to Museum of Modern Art (Freiburg im Breisgau)[60][61] |
Negotiations with the heirs of Fritz Salo Glaser resulted in an accord with the museum. | |
eight paintings by Max Beckmann, Juan Gris, and Paul Klee | Alfred Flechtheim[62] claim to | 2016: lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in New York by Michael Hulton of San Francisco and the widow of Flechtheim's nephew and heir Henry Hulton[64] | |
Tilla Durieux by Oskar Kokoschka[65] and others | Alfred Flechtheim[62] claim to | In 2013, the city of Cologne agreed to return from the Ludwig Museum Kokoshka's portrait of Tilla Durieux[67] and other drawings to the Fleichtheim heirs. The family agreed to let the museum keep drawings by Karl Hofer, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Ernst Barlach, Aristide Maillol and Wilhelm Morgner on display in the museum.[64] | |
Windmill (Marschlandschaft mit rotem Windrad) by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff | Max Rüdenberg[68]
claim to Sprengel Museum |
In 2017 the Sprengel Museum restituted the artwork to the heirs of the Holocaust victim Max Rüdenberg[69] | |
"Lighthouse With Rotating Beam" by Paul Adolf Seehaus | Alfred Flechtheim[62] claim to | 2012 settlement[71] with the Kuntsmuseum Bonn concerning "Lighthouse With Rotating Beam" by Paul Adolf Seehaus[64] | |
Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, ‘Preparing the Celebration of the Wine Harvest’[72] | Irma and Oscar Lowenstein[73]
Germany loaned the looted paintings to German museums |
Seized for Führermuseum, then loaned to German museums, to be restituted in 2021 to the London-based Vision Foundation[74] | |
Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, ‘The Good Natured-Child (The Beggar)’[75] | Irma and Oscar Lowenstein
Germany loaned the looted paintings to German museums |
Seized for Führermuseum, then loaned to German museums, to be restituted in 2021 to the Lowenstein heirs, the London-based Vision Foundation[74][76] | |
Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller ‘The Grandparents’ Visit’[77] | Irma and Oscar Lowenstein
Germany loaned the looted paintings to German museums |
Seized for Führermuseum, then loaned to German museums, to be restituted in 2021 to the London-based Vision Foundation[74] | |
triptych by Count Leopold von Kalckreuth | Marietta Glanville[78]
Neue Pinakothek in Munich, Bavarian State Paintings Collection, |
restituted in March 2000[79] | |
Marchesa Imperiale mit Tochter (Marchesa Imperiale with her daughter) by Rubens | Jacob and Rosa Oppenheimer[80] Staatsgalerie Stuttgart (State Gallery Stuttgart) | Research revealed out-of-court financial settlement in 1954. The 2000 claim was withdrawn.[80] | |
Egon Schiele, Kauernder weiblicher Akt (Crouching Female Nude), 1917. | Heinrich Rieger[81][82] claim to Ludwig Museum in Cologne[83] | restituted to heirs following Germany Advisory Commission unanimous recommendation[84] | |
Lucien Adrion La Procession oil painting, 1927 |
Ismar Littmann[85] Restitution request to Fondation Ernst Strassmann.[86] |
Restituted to the heirs on 17 June 2003. | |
Pablo Picasso
Madame Soler |
Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartoldy[87]
Restitution claim filed in Federal Court of New York against Bavaria (Bavaria State Painting collections)[88][89][90] |
In June 2021 Bavarian officials refused to refer the dispute to the national commission created to review claims of art lost in the Nazi era.[91] | |
Edvard Munch
"A summer's night on the beach" (1902) |
Alma Mahler-Werfel[92]
claim against |
Restituted to Mahler-Werfel heirs after long battle[93][94][95] | |
Bernardo Bellotto Canal Zwinger à Dresde oil painting, 1751 |
Max Emden[96][97]
Restitution request to Germany, after the painting was discovered hanging in the President's office. |
Munich Central Collecting Point (number 1648), 15 January 1946
Treuhandverwaltung für Kulturgut, Munich Office of the Federal President, Bonn, on loan since 1961. At first Germany resisted a claim, but after an advisory panel decision it was finally restituted to Emden's heirs in 2019. | |
Friedrich Olivier, Shriveled Leaves (1817) | family of Dr Marianne Schmidl
restitution request to the National Gallery of Art[100] |
"As part of an agreement with the Schmidl heirs announced on August 17, a similar drawing from the series – Oliver's Shrivelled Leaves – will remain in the gallery with an appropriate acknowledgment and financial compensation."[101] | |
A Branch with Shrivelled Leaves’, a drawing by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (1794-1872) | family of Dr Marianne Schmidl
restitution request to the National Gallery of Art[100] |
Restitution as part of an agreement concerning two artworks.[101] | |
Cornelis Bega
Autoportrait, oil sketch on paper, avant 1664 |
Jacques Goudstikker[102] Restitution request to Kunsthalle de Hambourg |
Restitution en October 2006.[103][104] | |
Carl Blechen Faune endormi Huile sur bois avant 1840 |
Clara Freund, wife of Julius Freund[105] Restitution request to Germany for this painting, as well as two other Blechens and an aquarelle by Anselm Feuerbach. |
Restituted to the heirs en 2009.[106] | |
Lovis Corinth Femme avec lys dans une serre oil painting, 1911 |
Otto Ollendorff Resitituion request to the museum of Görlitz |
Restituted to Ollendorf heirs in 1998. | |
Lovis Corinth Portrait de Charlotte Corinth oil painting, 1915 |
Ismar Littmann [sv][107] Restitution request to Hamburgische Landesbank |
Restituted to the heirs 27 November 2001. | |
Lovis Corinth Paysage romain oil painting, 1914 |
Curt Glaser[108] Restitution request to city of Hannovre / Musée Sprengel |
Restituted on 24 September 2007. | |
Carl Spitzweg Le sorcier oil painting, 1875–80 |
Leo Bendel (murdered by Nazis)[109] Restitution request to Kunstsammlung Rudolf August Oetker GmbH, Bielefeld. |
after initial refusal, restituted by Oetker to Bendel heirs in 2019[110] | |
Cornelis Springer Marché avec hôtel de ville et église (Lübeck) oil painting, 1870 |
Victor Ephrussi Restitution request to city of Lübeck |
Restituted to the heirs in February 2004.[111] | |
David Tenier Ländliche Szenen Öl auf Leinwand, 1677 |
Jacques Goudstikker Dzemande à la city of Cologne (Wallraf-Richartz-Museum) |
Restituted to the heirs in December 2005. | |
Hans Thoma Coucher de soleil sur le lac de Garde oil painting, |
Ottmar Strauss Restitution request to Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlung |
Restituted on 5 October 2004.[112] | |
Giambattista Tiepolo Painting "Rinaldo Saying Farewell to Armida" (L'adieu de Rinaldo à Armida) by Giambattista Tiepolo oil painting, vers 1725–1726 |
Frederico Gentili di Giuseppe Restitution request to Gemäldegalerie de Berlin |
Restituted in November 1999.[113] | |
Lorenzo Baldissera Tiepolo Painting "Portrait of a Bearded Man" (Portrait d'un homme barbu) oil painting, XVIIIe siècle |
Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to musée Herzog-Anton-Ulrich à Brunswick |
Restitution in December 2006 to the Goudstikker heirs. | |
Jacopo Tintoretto Portement de la croix oil painting, |
Lucie Mayer-Fuld[114] widow of Harry Fuld Restitution request to Karl Haberstock |
Settlement agreement between Lucie Mayer-Fuld and Karl Haberstock. The painting is now in the collection of the city of Düsseldorf. | |
Cornelis Troost Tableau familial oil painting, XVIIIe siècle |
Collection Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to musée de Wiesbaden |
Restituted to the heirs Goudstikker le 25 April 2007. | |
Constant Troyon Vaches sur la plaine oil painting, |
Collection Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to city of Cologne |
Restituted to the heirs en December 2005. | |
Franz Xaver Winterhalter Jeune Fille des monts Sabins oil painting, vers 1835 |
Collection Max Stern Restitution request to Maria-Luise Bissonnette |
Restituted on 27 December 2007 aux héritiers et au Max Stern Art Restitution Project.[115] | |
Philips Wouwerman École d'équitation oil painting, XVIIe siècle |
Collection Arthur Goldschmidt Restitution request to Fondation Karl et Magdalene Haberstock |
Restituted | |
Henri Matisse, Femme assise, oil painting, vers 1924 |
Collection Paul Rosenberg Restitution request to German authorities after the painting was discovered in Munich in the hoard of the son of Hitler's art dealer[116]« collection Gurlitt » in 2013[117] |
Restituted to the heirs in 2015. | |
Jean-Louis Forain, Portrait de femme de profil, oil painting, 1881 |
Armand Dorville Restitution request to German authorities after discover in the Gurlitt stash in Munich. 2013[118] |
Restituted to the heirs in 2020. | |
Jean-Louis Forain, Femme en robe du soir, aquarelle, vers 1880 | |||
Constantin Guys,
Amazone sur un cheval cabré,encre sur papier | |||
Camille Pissarro, La Seine vue du Pont-Neuf, au fond le Louvre | Max Heilbronn
Restitution request to German authorities after discover in the Gurlitt stash in Munich.[119] |
Restituted | |
Adolph von Menzel, Inneres einer gotischen Kirche, dessin, 1874 | Elsa Helene Cohen
Restitution request to German authorities after discover in the Gurlitt stash in Munich.[120] |
Restituted to the heirs in 2017. | |
Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Der Wildbach Strubb bei Ischi, oil painting, 1831[121] | Hermann Eissler Restitution request to German authorities after discover in the Gurlitt stash in Munich.[122] | Restituted to the heirs in 2017.[123] | |
Ferdinan Georg Waldmüller, Der Dachstein von Alt-Aussee gesehen, (View of Lake Altaussee and the Dachstein) oil painting, 1834[124] | |||
Thomas Couture, Portrait de jeune femme assise, oil painting, 1850 | Georges Mandel. Restitution request to German authorities after discover in the Gurlitt stash in Munich.[125] | Restitution to Mandel's granddaughter, Maria de las Mercedes Estrada in 2019 |
Canada
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Giorgio Vasari Les Noces de Cana oil painting, 1566 |
Collection d'art du musée de l'État hongrois Restitution request to musée des beaux-arts de Montréal |
Restituted to Hungary in January 1999. | |
Émile Vernet-Lecomte Aimée - Une jeune Égyptienne oil painting, 1869 |
Collection Max Stern Restitution request to an anonymous private seller at Sotheby's à New York. Put for sale in 2001, the painting was part of Max Stern's collection of 250 artworks |
restitution agreement on 19 October 2006.[126] | |
Édouard Vuillard Le Salon de Madame Aron oil painting, 1911–1912 |
Collection Alfred Lindon Restitution request to National Gallery of Canada[127] |
Restituted on 24 September 2003.[128][129] |
The Netherlands
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Kandinsky 'Painting with Houses | heirs of the Lewenstein family, (Emanuel Lewenstein, then his widow Hedwig Lewenstein and their children, Robert and Wilhelmine Lewenstein)[130]
restitution claim to |
Initially, in November 2018, the Dutch Restitution Decision ruled in favour of the City of Amsterdam and Stedelijk Museum, which housed the canvas, saying the "[i]nterest of the claimant in restitution does not outweigh the interest of the [Museum] in retaining the work."[132][133][134] But the Kohnstamm Committee, which had been established in 2016,[135] and the advocacy of Mondex Corporation,[136] urged an end to the "balance-of-interest" test that had previously reigned[137] in favour of the principle that “unless the facts expressly show otherwise, when assessing restitution applications concerning private individuals who belonged to a persecuted population group, we [will] assume that the loss of possession was involuntary.”[138]
As a result of these changes, the painting was restituted to its rightful owners in February 2022.[139] | |
seven pieces of Italian majolica | Alfred Pringsheim
heirs claim to Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum Foundation |
IN 2008, the Boijmans received a letter from the representative of the Pringsheim heirs requesting the return.[140] In 2024 the Boijmans museum includes the Pringsheim's majolica in its list of works with a suspicious provenance.[141] | |
"Woman Seated on the Grass at the Edge of a Meadow and Reading" by Nicolaas van der Waay | Isaak Leefsma and Helene Leefsma-Meijet (deported and murdered in Holocaust)
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam |
Boijman's director Dirk Hannema purchased the painting from the Nazi looting agency, Dieststelle Mühlmann, in 1943, shortly after the Jewish owners were deported to their deaths.[142] It remained in the Boijmans until 2000, when it was restituted to the Leefsma heirs.[143] | |
Old Man with Beard (NK2694)
by Salomon Koninck (1609–1656). |
Alphonse Stettiner, Oscar Stettiner and Adele de Jong-Stettiner[144]
Claim for restitution to Dutch authorities (Netherlands Cultural Heritage Agency) |
2 February 2015 The Dutch Restitutions Committee recommended rejecting the claim[144][145] | |
Dune Landscape with Deer Hunt by Gerrit Claesz Bleker | Richard Semmel
claim for restitution Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem |
Claim rejected in 2013 by the Dutch commission ("prioritises the interest of museums to keep paintings over the rights of claimants to restitution")[146] | |
Bernardo Strozzi's Christ and the Samaritan Woman at the Well (1635) | Richard Semmel[146]
Claim Museum de Fundatie in Zwolle |
Claim rejected by Dutch Commission in 2013 because of the importance of the painting[147]
"Rejection revisited after international criticism; museum overrides panel decision in 2021 to pay €200,000 in compensation to Semmel's heirs"[148] | |
Portrait of Pieter Bouwens | Gustaaf Hamburger, Amsterdam
Claim Museum Tongerlohuys, Roosendaal |
Restituted to the heir of Gustaaf Hamburger in 2015[149] | |
Jan Davidsz. de Heem (Utrecht 1606-1684 Antwerp), A Banquet still life (NK 2711) also known as Still Life with Glass, Glass Stand and Musical Instruments | Jacob Lierens[150]
Claim to Dutch authorities (on loan to the Centraal Museum, Utrecht) |
After many years of efforts to reclaim the paintings, the Lierens family was granted a favorable decision for restitution by the Dutch committee in 2019[151] | |
Dirck Hals (Haarlem 1591–1656) and Dirck van Delen (Heusden 1604/5-1671 Arnemuiden) A Merry Company in a palatial interior (NK 2584) also known as Banquet Scene with Musicians and Shuffle Board Players in an Interior | Jacob Lierens[152]
Claim to Dutch authorities (on loan to the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem) |
After many years of efforts to reclaim the paintings, the Lierens family was granted a favorable decision for restitution by the Dutch committee in 2019[151] | |
Salomon van Ruysdael
River Landscape with Ferry |
Jacques Goudstikker
Claim against the Rijksmuseum |
restituted after a battle to the heirs of the Goudstikker family in 2006[153] | |
Little Boy on His Deathbed," by 17th-century Dutch master Bartholomeus van der Helst | Jacques Goudstikker
Claim against The Netherlands |
The looted painting remained in Dutch museum for a half century until the family won a restitution battle[154] | |
A River landscape with a beggar's family and horsemen near a ruin (NK2782), | Gustaaf Hamburger[155][156]
claim for restitution Limburg Museum (on loan from Stichtung Nederlands Kunstbezit aas Esaias van de Velde) |
Restitution to Hamburger heirs in March 2014[155]
(confiscated by Dienstelle Mühlmann; anonymous Dorotheum sale (1942); Kunsthistoriches Museum Vienna; Stichtung Nederlands Kunstbesit (1951); NK2782; on loan to Limburg Museum in Venlo until restitution in 2014) | |
Studio of Bernard van Orley (Brussels c. 1488-1541)
Christ on the Road to Calvary (NK 1414) |
Hans Ludwig Larsen
Claim for restitution to Dutch authorities |
Restituted to the heirs of Hans Ludwig Larsen, 2014[157] The Dutch Restitution Committee also decided to restitute NK 1410, NK 1412, NK 1417, NK 1420, NK 1424, NK 1428, NK 1441, NK 1447, NK 1451, NK 2243 and NK 2463 to Larsen's heirs, however it also recommended that payment "in return for restitution" be demanded.[158] | |
P. Bordone, Portrait of a man (NK 1771) | Jacob and Rosa Oppenheimer
Claim for restitution to Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage in Rijswijk (‘ICN’). |
The Dutch Restitution Committee issued its recommendation
(1.67) on 4 February 2008, to return the painting Portrait of a man by P. Bordone (NK 1771) and the painting Merry company at a table by H.G. Pot (NK 2244) to the heirs of Rosa and Jakob Oppenheimer.[159] | |
H.G. Pot, Merry company at a table (NK 2244) | Jacob and Rosa Oppenheimer
Claim for restitution to Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage in Rijswijk (‘ICN’). |
The Dutch Restitution Committee issued its recommendation
(1.67) on 4 February 2008, to return the painting Portrait of a man by P. Bordone (NK 1771) and the painting Merry company at a table by H.G. Pot (NK 2244) to the heirs of Rosa and Jakob Oppenheimer.[159] | |
numerous artworks by different artists | Friedrich Gutmann Claim for restitution to Dutch authorities | In 1942, Gutmann was forced to sell his collection and was murdered by the Nazis. After the war, the collection was returned to the Dutch government which refused to restitute it to the Gutmann family, compelling the sons to file a lawsuit. In 1952, the courts ruled that the collection would be returned to the Gutmann family "on condition that they pay the Dutch authorities the amount of money their father had received from the Germans for the works". In 2002, the Dutch commission relented, and returned the artworks to the family without obliging them to pay.[160] | |
The Marriage Feast at Cana by Johann Georg Platzer (NK 2216) | Alfred and Fanny Mautner
Claim for restitution to Netherlands Art Property Collection (Dutch state |
On 25 November 2020, the Dutch Restitutions Committee advised the Minister of Education, Culture and Science to restitute the painting NK 2216 The Marriage Feast at Cana by J.G. Platzer to the heirs of Alfred George Mautner (1887–1958) and Franziska Mautner (1909–2003).[161] | |
numerous artworks including by Jacob van Geel, George Hendrik Breitner, Jan Toorop, Dirck van Delen, Max Liebermann | Numerous claimants
Claim for restitution to The Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum |
Boijmans restitution page lists ongoing and resolved investigation. | |
"Shepherdess with Child in Landscape," by Jacob Gerritsz, | Jacques Hedeman[162]
Claim for restitution to Dordrechts Museum[163] |
"After the case received extensive publicity, the museum and Hedeman's heirs reached an 'agreement' by which the painting would remain in the museum and the latter would pay an undisclosed amount to the heirs."[160] | |
"Portrait of a Man," by H.W. Wieringa | Claim for restitution to Robert May (1873–1962) | "Portrait of a Man," by H.W. Wieringa. In 2008, restitution claim refused by Dutch authorities.[160] | |
six paintings, including a Rembrandt | Catalina von Pannwitz-Roth (1876–1959) a German-born Jew of Argentine descent,
Claim for restitution to Dutch authorities |
The six paintings were sold in exchange for an exit visa. Status unresolved[160] | |
hundreds of artworks by different artists | Jacques Goudstikker
Claim for restitution to Dutch authorities |
In 2006, 202 artworks were returned to the Goudstikker family (out of 1250 pieces that were plundered).[160][164] The New York Times reported that the restitution "raised hackles from some in the government."[165] |
Spain
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Camille Pissarro Rue Saint-Honoré, après midi, effet de pluie oil painting, 1897 |
Collection Lily Cassirer Request for restitution to Thyssen Bornemisza Museum |
Long court battle. Not restituted[166][167] | |
André Masson Métamorphose oil painting, 1930 |
Collection Pierre David Weill Restitution request to the National Museum Centro de Arte reine Sophie à Madrid |
The painting had been sold several times; in 1995 it was bought by the National Museum. An amicable agreement was reached. | |
15th-century paintings ‘Mater Dolorosa’ and ‘Ecce Homo’ attributed to the school of the Dutch painter Dieric Bouts. | Czartoryski collection in Gołuchów
Museum of Pontevedra |
Spain's Museum of Pontevedra returned the two paintings to Polish authorities in January 2023.[168] |
United States
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Piet Mondrian
Composition with Blue[169] |
heirs of Piet Mondrian
restitution claim to the Philadelphia Museum of Art[170] |
Restitution claim filed in claim, filed in the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas in December 2021.
Philadelphia Museum of Art fighting claim with technical defenses. | ||||||
Camille Pissarro | Léone-Noëlle Meyer (daughter of
Raoul Meyer) Claim for restitution of Pissarro to the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of the University of Oklahoma[171] |
After long court battle between Meyer and the Fred Jones Jr. Museum,[172][173] and a 2016 settlement that recognized Meyer's ownership while imposing an obligation to move the painting between Paris and Oklahoma every three years, Meyer asked a French court to break the agreement as unworkable after the Orsay museum objected to "the cost of transporting the work between countries and the physical effect that would have on the fragile painting".[174] The Fred Jones Jr. Museum sued Meyer demanding that she pay a $3.5 million fine.[175] Meyer abandoned her effort to recover her father's Pissarro, saying, "I have no other choice"[176] | ||||||
Meules de blé (Wheatstacks) (1888) by Vincent van Gogh[177] | Max Meirowsky[178] | In November 2021, Meules de blé (1888), was sold at Christie's for $35 million after a three party restitution agreement involving the heirs of Max Meirowsky, Alexandrine de Rothschild, and representatives for Cox's estate which had purchased the painting from Wildenstein.[181][182] | ||||||
Taunus Road by Ernst Kirchner (1916) | heirs of Dr. Max Fischer[183]
claim to a private collector |
Restituted in 2020.[184] | ||||||
Lucas Cranach the Elder, The Resurrection, 1530. | Margarete Eisenmann[185] claim to | In 1949, the looted Cranach resurfaced at Sotheby's consigned by Hans W. Lange, whose auction house was known for forced sales of Jewish-owned property. It passed through Hugo Perls and Knoedler gallery before Eugene Thaw bought it around 1968. In April 2021 the Cranach was sold at auction following a settlement between the Eisenmann and Thaw heirs[186] | ||||||
Landscape With Smokestacks by Degas | Friedrich and Louise Gutmann family
claim to Daniel C. Searle[187] |
After insisting falsely that the painting had never belonged to Gutmann, where was murdered in the Holocaust, or that Gutmann sold it voluntarily, Searle ceded to public criticism[188] and reached a settlement with the Gutmann family in 1998.[189][190] | ||||||
Lucas Cranach the Elder :
Adam and Eve pair of paintings, oil on panel, around 1530 |
Jacques Goudstikker Collection
Claim for restitution to the Norton Simon Museum[191] The pair of paintings was auctioned off in 1931 at the Rudolph Lepke auction house as part of the Stroganoff collection and acquired by Goudstikker; after 1945 restituted by the Dutch government to George Stroganoff, who sold it to Spencer Samuels, who sold it to Norton Winfred Simon.[192] |
Court battle[193] | ||||||
Egon Schiele
Portrait of the Artist's Wife (1917) |
Heirs of Karl Maylaender
claim to Foundation of Robert “Robin” Owen Lehman[194] |
Claims from two families of Holocaust victims, Maylaender and Heinrich Rieger against Lehman in 2019 for the Schiele acquired in 1964 from Marlborough Gallery in London.[195][196] | ||||||
Vincent Van Gogh
La cueillette des olives (The Olive Picking, 1889) |
Heirs of Hedwig Stern
lawsuit filed against the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation in Athens, Greece[197][198] |
Lawsuit filed in December 2022 alleges that the provenance published for Van Gogh's La cueillette des olives (The Olive Picking, 1889) omitted Hedwig Stern and that "the Met acquired it in 1956 and then 'secretly sold' it in 1972 to avoid facing restitution claims.[197][199] | ||||||
Vincent Van Gogh | Heirs of
Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, lawsuit filed against Sompo Holdings, a Japan-based insurance holding company[200] |
On 13 December 2022, the descendant of Mendelssohn-Bartholdy filed a lawsuit in federal court in Chicago against Sompo Holdings, the successor firm to Yasuda Fire & Marine which had purchased the painting for $39.9m (including fees) in 1987, alleging that the firm had been "recklessly indifferent" to the painting's past.[200] | ||||||
"View of Beverwijk" by
Salomon van Ruysdael |
Heirs of Ferenc Chorin
to Museum of Fine Arts, Boston |
Looted in 1945, the painting was sold in 1982 by London art dealer Edward Speelman to the MFA, Boston. The provenance was false. Deaccessioned on 7 October 2021 for restitution to the heirs of Ferenc Chorin.[201][202] | ||||||
Sand Hills by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner | Max Fischer[203]
claim to MoMa |
After initially refusing the claim, MoMa restituted the Kircher, which it had acquired via Weyhe Gallery, in 2015,[204] after it was discovered that museum had made a mistake in identifying the painting.[205] | ||||||
"Adoration of the Magi", by Corrado Giaquinto. | Heirs of Federico Gentili Di Giuseppe
Request for restitution to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA) |
In 2000, Gentili di Giuseppe's heirs contacted the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) Boston concerning the restitution of the painting "Adoration of the Magi", by Corrado Giaquinto. The MFA had purchased the painting from Thomas Agnew & Sons, Ltd, which had acquired it at Christie's. A settlement involving a "part purchase-part donation agreement" was reached in October 2000.[206][207] | ||||||
buste de Francesco Mochi
("Buste d’un jeune garçon") |
Heirs of Federico Gentili Di Giuseppe
Request for restitution to the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) |
Settlement reached in 2000 between the heirs and the Art Institute of Chicago, which had purchased the bust from London art dealer Anthony Roth in 1989.[208] | ||||||
Henri Matisse :
Odalisque oil on canvas, 1928 |
Paul Rosenberg Collection
Claim to the Seattle Art Museum |
Restitution in October 2000 after reviewing and recommending the Holocaust Art Restitution Project (HARFE) in Washington. | ||||||
Claude Monet :
Bord de Mur Pastel,1865 |
Adalbert Parlagi Collection
Claim to an owner in Louisiana |
Restored to Parlagi Heirs in 2024[209] | ||||||
Claude Monet :
Champs de Blé à Vétheuil Oil on canvas, 1879 |
Collection Gerda Dorothea de Weerth
Claim for restitution to Edith Marks Baldinger; Private lawsuit in the New York District Court |
Long court battle[210][211] | ||||||
Amedeo Modigliani:
Seated Man with Cane (L'homme assis) |
Oscar Stettinger[212][213][214]
David Nahmad and International Art Center[213] |
Court battle Int'l Art Ctr. v. Estate of Stettiner[215] | ||||||
Jan Mostaert :
Portrait of a businessman oil on canvas, around 1520 |
Czartoryski collection
claim to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA). The painting and the entire collection of the Czartoryski family in Warsaw were confiscated in 1942, brought to Austria and probably stolen there by American military personnel after the end of the war. In 1949 it came into the possession of the VMFA. |
The VMFA started an inventory review in 1998 and identified the painting as looted art. It was returned to the Czartorsky Foundation in Warsaw in 2004. | ||||||
eight illuminated manuscripts | Alphonse Kann[216]
Wildenstein[217] |
Court battle Warin v Wildenstein & Co., Inc.[218] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso
Boy Leading a horse oil on canvas, 1905 to 1906 |
Belonged to art dealer Ambroise Vollard. Acquired by Gertrude Stein and Leo Stein, around 1907 to 1913. Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy acquired in 1934 or 1935. Mendelssohn-Bartholdy sold before his death to the Jewish art gallery of Justin Thannhauser. Thannhauser fled Germany and spent most of war living in Switzerland. He then sold painting to former chairman of the Museum of Modern Art William S. Paley in 1936. Paley gifted to the Museum of Modern Art in 1964.[219] | Julius Schoeps, Director of the Moses Mendelssohn Center for European-Jewish Studies at the University of Potsdam, as speaker for Mendelssohn-Bartholdy family, sued Museum of Modern Art in 2007 for the painting. Jed S. Rakoff ruled that Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy had been forced to sell the painting by the Nazi Party. The dispute was settled out of court in February 2009, with the museum retaining the work.[219][220] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso :
The Actor (painting) oil on canvas, 1904 to 1905 |
1912 owned by Paul Leffmann, a German Jewish businessman forced to flee the Nazis in 1938. Sold under duress to a Paris dealer according to court papers to fund escape from the Nazis.[221][222] Eventually purchased in 1941 by Thelma Chrysler Foy from Knoedler gallery in New York.[221][223] She donated it to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, in 1952, where it has since been displayed.[221][223] | In 2016, heir of Leffmann sued Metropolitan Museum of Art in U.S. federal court, seeking return of the painting on the ground that Leffman had sold it under duress.[221] In 2018, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled in favor of the Met, ruling that the plaintiff could not show, under New York law, that the painting was sold under duress. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the dismissal on the ground that the claim was raised too late (72 years after the work was sold and 58 years after it was donated to the art museum).[222] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso :
Femme en blanc oil on canvas, 1922 |
Carlotta Landsberg Collection
Claim against Marilynn Alsdorf |
Restituted in August 2005 through financial compensation.[224] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso :
The Absinthe Drinker (Portrait de Angel Fernándo de Soto) ) Oil on canvas, 1903 |
Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy Collection
Claim to the Andrew Lloyd Webber Art Foundation[225] |
Court battle, followed by settlement.[226] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso :
Head of a Woman ( Tête de femme ) pastel, 1903 |
Collection Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy
Claim to the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC |
The picture was returned to the heirs in 2020.[227] | ||||||
Pablo Picasso
Still Life with a Portrait 1906 oil on canvas |
Belonged to Dr Meyer-Udewald, murdered (Auschwitz ) in the Holocaust[228] Her premature death activated the terms of the 1925 Will of Ernst Schlesinger.
Restitution claim to the Phillips Collection |
Settlement, with secret terms.[229]
Still Life with a Portrait was sold at Christies after the settlement[230] | ||||||
Egon Schiele
Russian War Prisoner[231] |
Heirs of Fritz Grünbaum[232][233]
Claim to Art Institute of Chicago |
The Art Institute of Chicago refused restitution and sued the Manhattan District Attorney.[234] | ||||||
Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn (attributed):
The Liberation of Saint Peter from Prison Drawing, |
Arthur Feldmann Collection
Claim to a private owner |
Restituted on 30 November 2004[235] | ||||||
Interior of a Church, School of 16th-century Flemish artist Pieter Neeffs the Elder | Arthur Feldmann
Claim for restitution to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York |
Restituted 2007[236]
Interior of a Church, that has been attributed to the School of 16th-century Flemish artist Pieter Neeffs the Elder, to the heirs of its original owner, Dr. Arthur Feldmann. The drawing, looted by the Nazis in 1939,will be returned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art to Uri Peled, grandson of Dr. Feldmann. | ||||||
Pierre-Auguste Renoir :
Le Poirier Oil on canvas, |
Fritz Gutmann
Claim to the Parke-Bernet auction house, New York The painting was confiscated in France during World War II; In 1969 it was auctioned in New York; its whereabouts are unknown. |
No returns, the auction house (now Sotheby's) did not disclose the name of the buyer.[237] | ||||||
Pierre-Auguste Renoir :
Paysage pres de Cagnes Oil on canvas, |
Richard Semmel
Claims for restitution to the heirs of Newton Korhumel[238] |
Before the painting was auctioned at Christie's auction house, Richard Semmel's heirs and the owners agreed on a compensation payment.[239] | ||||||
Peter Paul Rubens :
Allegory of Eternity Oil on canvas, around 1625 |
Rosa and Jacob Oppenheimer
Claim to the San Diego Museum of Art[240] |
In May 2004 the heirs and the museum came to an agreement, the painting remained in the museum after a compensation payment. | ||||||
Egon Schiele :
Dead City III Oil on canvas, 1911 |
Fritz Grünbaum Collection
Claim against the Leopold Foundation in Vienna.[241] |
The painting was confiscated at a retrospective exhibition in New York in 1998, but was returned to the Leopold Foundation in Vienna in the same year after a court order. | ||||||
Egon Schiele :
Portrait of Walburga Neuzil (Wally) Oil on wood, 1912 |
Collection Lea Bondi-Jaray
Claim against the Leopold Foundation in Vienna. |
The painting was confiscated from a retrospective exhibition in New York in 1998.[242] After twelve years of negotiations, the painting was returned to the Leopold Foundation in July 2010, which pays compensation of 19 million dollars to the heirs. | ||||||
Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints Nicholas of Tolentino and Sebastian | Jacques Goudstikker collection
Restitution claim to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts |
VMFA Board of Trustees voted to restitute[243] | ||||||
Egon Schiele
"Woman Hiding Her Face" (1912) and "Woman in a Black Pinafore" (1911), |
Fritz Grunbaum
Restitution claim to art dealer Richard Nagy |
Legal battle resulting in a court ruling to restitute to the Grunbaum heirs[244] | ||||||
"The Rape of Tamar," circa 1640, attributed to Eustache Le Sueur. | Siegfried Aram[245]
Restitution request to the Metropolitan Museum of Art |
After refusing to restitute to Aram who died in 1978, the Metropolitan modified the provenance which had omitted Siegried Aram's previous ownership to mention him in 2020.[246] | ||||||
Portrait of a Man and Woman in an Interior (1665–67) by Dutch artist Eglon van der Neer (1634–1703) | Walter Westfeld (murdered in Auschwitz)
restitution request to the Boston Museum of Fine Art[247] |
Settlement in 2011[248] | ||||||
François Boucher Les Amoureux Jeunes oil painting, XVIIIe siècle |
André Jean Seligmann / Claim to the Utah Museum of Fine Arts[249] |
Restituted in April 2004.[250] | ||||||
El Greco Le Mont Sinaï oil painting, vers 1600 |
Collection Ferenc Hatvany (François de Hatvany)[251] Claim for restitution to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Museum of Heraklion (Greece). Le tableau avait été mis en sécurité lors de l'entrée des troupes allemandes à Budapest en 1944 ; on ne sait pas comment il a refait surface dans le marché de l'art en 1945. |
The claim for restitution was rejected.[252] | ||||||
Marc Chagall L'Échelle de Jacob Peinture vers 1930 |
Erna Menzel The painting was looted in 1941 by the 'ERR in Bruxelles. After the war it turned up in a private collection in the United States. In 1966, Erna Menzel learned of its location and demanded restitution.[253] |
Court battle was decided by the New York Supreme Court on 22 October 1966. Restituted. Menzil V. List was the first restitution case in the United States.[254] | ||||||
Gustave Courbet Le Grand Pont oil painting, 1864 |
Josephine Weinmann Collection Claim for restitution to Yale[255][256] |
Restituted on 23 October 2001[257] | ||||||
Corneille de Lyon Portrait de Jean d'Albon oil painting, XVIe siècle |
Julius Priester Collection The painting was seized by the Gestapo in 1938 in Vienna and then turned up in the US at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.[258] |
Restitution in May 2004.[259] | ||||||
Lucas Cranach l'Ancien Adam et Ève oil painting vers 1530 |
Jacques Goudstikker[260] Claim for restitution to Norton Simon Museum[261] |
Marei von Saher-Langenbein request for restitution was rejected by the court in 2012.[262] | ||||||
Henri Matisse Ruisseau dans les Alpes oil painting, 1907 |
Alphonse Kann Collection[263] Claim for restitution to the Menil Collection in Houston (Texas) |
Settlement resulting in financial compensation of the heirs in exchange for the artwork remaining in the museums on 22 January 2002[264] | ||||||
Paul Gauguin
Street Scene in Tahiti (1891) |
heirs of Hugo and Martha Nathan (Ullin)
claim to Toledo Museum of Art |
The Toledo Museum sued the heirs for quiet title.[265][266] | ||||||
The Diggers 1889
by Vincent van Gogh |
heirs of Hugo and Martha Nathan (Ullin)
claim to Detroit Institute of Art (DIA) |
The Detroit Museum of Art rejected the claim arguing that Michigan's three-year statute of limitations precluded the court or a jury from deciding the merits of the case.[267][268]
DIA then initiated a successful Declaratory Judgment Action, Detroit Institute of Arts v. Ullin | ||||||
Self Portrait with Model by George Grosz | Grosz Heirs v. Museum of Modern Art[269] | Case against the MoMa was dismissed due to statute of limitations.[270] | ||||||
Degas painting "Danseuses" | Est. of Kainer v. UBS AG, No. 76, 2021 WL 5927040 (N.Y. 16 Dec. 2021).[271] | The Court of Appeals affirmed dismissal citing the doctrine of forum non conveniens[272] | ||||||
Seine at Asnières by Claude Monet | Mme F. Helphen
Detroit Institute of Art |
The DIA purchased the Monet through Fine Arts Associates (Otto Gerson) in 1948. After it was discovered to have been looted it was returned to Mme F. Helphen.[273] | ||||||
Van Gogh's View of the Hospice and the Chapel of Saint-Remy | Margarete Mauthner
claim against |
Claim dismissed due on statute of limitations grounds. Taylor then sold the painting at Christies.[275] |
France
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Georges Braque L'Homme à la guitare oil painting, 1911–1912 |
Alphonse Kann Collection Claim for restitution to Centre Pompidou[276] |
The Pompidou Center's Musée national d'art moderne (Mnam) had purchased the Braque from Heinz Berggruen in 1981. After investigation of the Kann claim, and intervention by a judge, a settlement agreement was reached between the French state and the Kann heirs in 2005.[277][278][279] | |
Georges Braque Table avec blague à tabac oil painting, 1930 |
Paul Rosenberg Collection Claim for restitution to Madame de Chambrun[280] |
Restituted to the heirs. | |
Bernardo Bellotto dit Canaletto Vue de l'église de la Salute depuis l'entrée du Grand Canal oil painting, vers 1730 |
Bernhard Altmann Collection Claim for restitution to Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg[281] |
The City of Strasbourg paid 2.5 million euros (0.5 of which came from sponsorship) to the Altmann heirs.[282] | |
Marc Chagall
Le Père, Oil Painting, 1911 |
Heirs of David Cender.[283]
Claim of Restitution made to Paris Museum for the Art and History of Judaism.[284] |
David Cender survived the war and in 1958, in France, he submitted a request for war loss compensation from the government of West Germany, but was unsuccessful.[284][283] Sometime between the late 1940s and early 1950s, Chagall himself reacquired the artwork, presumably without knowing its provenance,[283] and in 1988 Le Père was donated by Chagall's heirs to the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris, which then transferred it to the Paris Museum for the Art and History of Judaism.[284]
In 2015 Mondex Corporation began researching the painting and in 2020 submitted a restitution claim, which the museum accepted.[283] In order to complete the restitution, though, Mondex continued advocating on behalf of Cender's heirs for the creation of a legal exception to France's standard practice of not deaccessioning artworks in state museums.[283] This exception came to be when the Assemblée Nationale passed a bill pertaining to the restitution of Le Père and fourteen other artworks, on February 21, 2022.[285][286] | |
Albert Gleizes Paysage oil painting, 1911 MNR R 1 P[287] |
Collection Alphonse Kann / Claim for restitution to musée national d'art moderne, Centre Pompidou[288] |
Restituted in July 1997. | |
François Marius Granet La Mort de Nicolas Poussin en 1665 dessin, 1833 MNR REC 97 |
Collection Alphonse Kann Claim for restitution to the Louvre[289] |
Restituted on 16 March 1998. | |
Frans Hals Portrait du pasteur Adrianus Tegularius oil painting, vers 1650 |
Adolphe Schloss Collection Claim for restitution to Adam Williams, Newhouse Galleries[290] |
Restituted in July 2001. | |
Gustav Klimt Die Erfüllung Gouache, Werkvorlage zum Stoclet-Fries, 1905–1909 |
Collection Karl Grünwald Restitution request to Musée d'Art Moderne de Strasbourg[291] |
Restitution ordered by court after legal battle 11 January 1999.[292] | |
Fernand Léger La Femme en rouge et vert oil painting, 1914 MNR R 2 P |
Collection Leonce Rosenberg Restitution request to musée national d'art moderne, Centre Pompidou |
Restituted to the heirs in February 1999.[293] | |
Gustav Klimt
Rosiers sous les arbres |
Nora Stiasny (1898–1942)
Restitution request to the Orsay Museum in France |
The launch of the restitution process was announced by France's culture minister Roselyne Bachelot in March 2021.[294] | |
Léon Lhermitte Les Glaneuses pastel, 1892 MNR REC 163 |
Collection Levi de Benzion conservée en République fédérale d'Allemagne jusqu'en 1989, remis à l'Etat français en 1994, puis par l'Etat français aux ayants droit Lévi de Benzion |
Restituted on 6 November 1996. | |
Henri Matisse Mur rose oil painting, 1898 MNR R 5 P |
Collection Harry Fuld Restitution request to French government |
Restituted to the heirs on 27 November. | |
Claude Monet Nymphéas (1904) oil painting, 1904 MNR 214 |
Collection Paul Rosenberg Restitution request to Collection nationale |
Restituted to the heirs on 29 April 1999. | |
Pablo Picasso Tête de femme oil painting, 1921 MNR R 16 P |
Collection Alphonse Kann Restitution request to musée national d'art moderne (Centre Pompidou) |
Restitution in 2003 ordered by court decision.[295] | |
Egon Schiele Soleil d'automne II Sonnenblumen or Wilted Sunflowers (Autumn Sun II) oil painting, |
Collection Fritz Grünwald[296] Restitution request to a private collector |
Restituted to the heirs.[297][298] | |
Bernardo Strozzi La Sainte Famille avec Jean-Baptiste oil painting, vers 1630 MNR 290 |
Collection Frederico Gentili di Giuseppe Restitution request to the Louvre |
Restituted to the heirs by judicial decision in December 1999.[299] | |
Giambattista Tiepolo Alexandre le Grand et Campaspe dans l'atelier d'Appele oil painting, vers 1725–1726 MNR 305 | |||
Alessandro Magnasco Joueurs de cartes devant une cheminée oil painting, vers 1700 MNR 798 | |||
Moretto da Brescia (Alessandro Bonvicino) Visitation de Marie oil painting, XVIe siècle MNR 277 | |||
Rosalba Carriera Portait de femmes pastel, XVIIIe siècle MNR REC 73 | |||
D'après Antoine Watteau Concert dans un parc oil painting, XVIIIe siècle MNR 890 |
Edgar Stern.
Restitution request to French State for paintings that were in the MNR collection (looted by Nazis and repatriated to France)[300] |
Restituted in October 2020 to the heirs of Marguerite Stern[301] | |
Cornelis Beelt Intérieur d'écurie huile sur bois, XVIIe siècle MNR 923 | |||
Mathys Schoevaerdts Place avec église, obélisque et passants oil painting, XVIIe siècle MNR 925 | |||
Anonyme Scène dans un parc gouache, XVIIIe siècle MNR REC 146 | |||
Jean-Honoré Fragonard (manière de) Scène galante, aquarelle, XVIIIe siècle MNR REC 147 | |||
Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps, Deux singes au piano, aquarelle, XIXe siècle MNR REC 149 | |||
Ernest Meissonier Joueurs d'échecs dessin, XIXe siècle MNR REC 150 | |||
André Derain, La Chapelle-sous-Crécy, oil painting, vers 1910 |
René Gimpel. | Restituted to the heirs of Gimpel in 2020.[302] | |
André Derain, Pinède, Cassis, oil painting, 1907 | |||
André Derain, Vue de Cassis, oil painting, 1907 | |||
Camille Pissarro, La Cueillette des pois, gouache, 1887 |
Simon Bauer
Restitution request to Brune and Robbie Toll who purchased the painting at Christie's in 1995.[303] |
Restituted after court battle to Simon Bauer's grandson Jean-Jacques[304] |
Great Britain
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Nicolò dell'Abbate Sainte Famille oil painting, XVIe siècle |
Arthur Feldmann Restitution request to British Museum |
April 2006, financial settlement with art remaining in museum. | |
Lucas Cranach l'Ancien Vénus et l'Amour voleur de miel oil painting vers 1525 |
Collection Emil Goldschmidt (jusqu'à 1909) National Gallery of London |
||
Albert Cuyp Portrait d'un gentleman, Jacob Gerritsz oil painting, 1631 |
Collection Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to Sotheby's |
The painting was restituted on 30 October 2003. | |
Thomas de Keyser Résurrection du Christ oil painting, XVIIe siècle |
Collection Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to Rafael Valls Gallery of London |
Financial compensation was agreed on 29 June 2006. | |
Gerrit Lundens Chasseur courtisant une trayeuse oil painting, XVIIe siècle |
Collection Jacques Goudstikker Restitution request to Christie's, London |
Financial compensation was agreed on 3 July 2006. | |
Frans van Mier l'Ancien A dog lying down oil painting, XVIIe siècle |
Collection Arthur Feldmann Restitution request to this painting and two others at the Courtauld Institute in London |
In January 2007, the heirs and the Institute reached an agreement: two paintings were returned and the third remained in the museum. | |
View of Hampton Court Palace (1710), by Jan Griffier the Elder | The painting was owned by a Jewish banker from Düsseldorf who was killed by the Nazis in the late 1930s. His children, who made the claim, were sent to Britain, where their mother joined them after spending time in a concentration camp.[305] | "The Government has agreed to pay the £125,000 based on the recommendations of a panel that was established to help resolve claims from people who lost cultural objects during the Nazi era that are held by British collections."[305] | |
Claude Monet Au Parc Monceau oil painting, 1878 |
Collection Ludwig Kainer Restitution request to Sotheby's At the auction, it was established that the painting had been stolen. |
An agreement has been reached between the sellers and the heirs of the Kainer collection. |
Hungary
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Lucas Cranach l'Ancien L'Annonciation à Joachim oil painting, 1518 |
Collection Mór Lipót Herzog Claim for restutution to the Hungarian National collection[306] |
In July 2010, the heirs filed a lawsuit against the Republic of Hungary with the Washington District Court for the return of this and 39 other paintings.[307] | |
Francisco de Zurbarán Saint André oil painting, vers 1630–1632 | |||
Gustave Courbet Le Château de Blonay (neige) oil painting vers 1875 | |||
El Greco: L'Agonie dans le jardin (Christ au Mont des oliviers) oil painting, vers 1610 | |||
Mihály Munkácsy Dusty Road (Poros út) oil painting, 1874 |
Collection Jenô Vida Restitution request toSzépmûvészeti Múzevers de Budapest |
Restituted on 26 November 2002. | |
Mihály Munkácsy Deux familles oil painting, 1877 | |||
Mihály Munkácsy Les Visiteurs du bébé oil painting, 1879 | |||
Mihály Munkácsy Le Christ devant Pilate oil painting, étude, 1880 |
Ireland
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
The Campion Hall Triptych | Fritz Mannheimer John Hunt collection, Hunt Museum Limerick | Restituted to the Mannheimer heirs[308] |
Israel
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Edgar Degas Quatre danseuses nues en repos charcoal drawing, 1898 |
Collection Goudstikker Restitution request to the Israel Museum in Jérusalem |
Restituted to the heirs in March 2005 then left on deposit at the museum. | |
Paul Klee Danse du voile drawing |
Harry Fuld Restitution request to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem The drawing arrived in the museum in 1950 |
Restituted to the heirs. | |
Camille Pissarro Boulevard Montmartre, printemps oil painting, 1897 |
Max Silberberg[309] Restitution request to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem[310] |
Restituted to the heirs in February 2002[311] |
Italy
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Jacopo del Sellaio
Madonna and Child with the Young St John and Two Angels (1480–85) |
Gustav Arens, Ann and her husband Friedrich Unger[312]
Restitution claim to the Cerruti Foundation of Turin |
A financial settlement in 2020[313] | |
Sandro Botticelli Portrait d'un jeune homme à la casquette rouge oil painting, 1484 |
Collection Fritz Gutmann Restitution request to an anonymous Italian citizen |
Restituted in March 1997 to the heirs of Fritz Gutmann. | |
Romanino Le Christ portant sa croix, oil painting, vers 1542-1543 |
Collection Federico Gentile di Giuseppe Restitution request to Mary Brogan Museum of Art & Science of Tallahassee in Florida. |
Restituted to the heirs de Federico Gentile di Giuseppe 18 April 2012 by order of a federal court[314] |
Japan
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Paul Klee Fliegenstadt Aquarelle, 1921 |
Collection Lissitzky-Küppers Restitution request to Kiyomizu Sannenzaka and the Kyoto Museum |
Restituted to the heirs on 29 January 2001. | |
Alfred Sisley Soleil de Printemps - Le Loing oil painting, 1892 |
Collection Louis Hirsch Restitution request to an unknown Japanese collector |
Restituted on 24 March 2004. |
Liechtenstein
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Wilhelm Leibl
Jeune fille devant une fenêtre drawing, 19th century |
Collection Max Silberberg Restitution request to Fondation Ratjen de Vaduz |
Restituted in 1999 via financial compensation |
Czech Republic
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
František Kupka Composition abstraite oil painting, vers 1920 |
Jindrich Waldes Restitution request to National Gallery Prague. |
Restituted in 1996. | |
Otakar Nejedly Paysage oil painting, vers 1920 |
Collection Oskar Federer Restitution request to East Bohemian Gallery of Fine Arts in Pardubice |
||
Rembrandt (école) Le Juif au bonnet de fourrure oil painting, vers 1660 |
Adolphe Schloss Restitution request to National Gallery Prague |
Restituted on 25 June 2002 | |
Paul Signac Barque sur la Seine oil painting, vers 1901 |
Emil Freund / Restitution request to Jewish Museum of Prague. |
Restitued December 2008. |
Switzerland
editIllustration | Artist and artworks | Former owner / Restitution Request | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Claude Monet
Poppy Field near Vétheuil |
Max Emden[315]
Restitution request to Foundation E.G. Bührle Collection[316] |
Juan Carlos Emden demanded for years that the Bühlre Foundation clarify the Nazi-era gaps in the provenance[317] The Foundation rejected Emden's claim.[318] | |
Dompteuse
by Otto Dix |
Ismar Littmann (1878-1934)
Restitution request to Kunstmuseum Berne[319] |
The Otto Dix painting which had belonged to Holocaust victim Ismar Littmann was found in the Gurlitt stash.[320] In 2021 the Berne museum agreed to restitute it.[321] | |
Pierre Bonnard La Vénus de Cyrène oil painting |
Bernheim Jeune[322] Restitution request to Kunstmuseum de Bâle |
Settlement agreement 8 July 1998:[323] painting remains in museum | |
Ferdinand Hodler
Thunersee mit Stockhornkette |
Max Silberberg
Simon and Charlotte Frick Stiftung, St Gallen Museum[324] |
In 2023 an agreement was reached between the heirs of Holocaust victim Max Silberberg and the Simon and Charlotte Frick Foundation in Switzerland.[325] | |
John Constable Dedham from Langham oil painting |
John et Anna Jaffe[326] Restitution request to musée des beaux-arts de La Chaux-de-Fonds in Switzerland |
Restituted in 2018 after a long battle[327] | |
Wassily Kandinsky Improvisation Nr. 10 oil painting |
Collection Sophie Lissitzky-Küppers[328][329] Restitution request to Fondation Beyeler |
The painting was returned to the museum in return for financial compensation. | |
Max Liebermann École de couture à l'orphelinat d'Amsterdam oil painting |
Collection Max Silberberg[330] Restitution request to Bündner Kunstmuseum de Chur |
Restituted on 11 May 1999, now in the Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal | |
Édouard Manet La Sultane oil painting 1871 |
Collection Max Silberberg[331] Restitution request to Fondation Collection E.G. Bührle of Zurich[332] |
Bührle foundation refused restitution.[333][334][335] | |
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec Le Premier Tricot oil painting, |
Jakob Goldschmidt[336] Restitution request to heirs of Jacques Koerfer |
After 12 years of litigation, the Swiss federal tribunal ordered the restitution of this painting as well as Dans la loge also by Toulouse-Lautrec |
Poland
editJan van Goyen's 1638 painting "Huts on a Canal," | Jacques Goudstikker | Poland refuses restitution[338] | |
"A Boy, in Profile, Singing, in a Feigned Oval" by Pieter de Grebber | Abe Gutnajer[339] Anonymous Latvian owner | negotiated deal between the current Latvian owner and Gutnajer's descendants in 2008[339] | |
81 works seized in the Netherlands by the Nazis or their agents most likely ended up in occupied Poland | the Origins Unknown Agency, a Dutch organization that investigates cases of looted art, was commissioned by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, to investigate art looted from Dutch Jews that ended up in Poland[337] |
Links to Restitution Reports from National Committees
editReports Austria (Provenance Research and Restitution in the Austrian Federal Collections
Notes and references
edit- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Gentili di Giuseppe, Frederico". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "Resolved Stolen Art Claims" (PDF). Herrick,Feinstein. 1 January 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
- ^ Cuthbertson, Debbie (29 May 2014). "NGV to return painting to heirs of owner threatened by Nazis". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Gallery under fire over Nazi loot". www.abc.net.au. 8 July 2007. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "Claim on gallery's 'Nazi-loot' art". www.lootedart.com. The Australian. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
- ^ "The stolen art that found its way home". The Independent. 23 October 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "The stolen art that found its way home". The Independent. 13 November 1999. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
- ^ Chechi, Alessandro (13 March 2014). The Settlement of International Cultural Heritage Disputes. OUP Oxford. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-19-100908-2. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
- ^ Hickley, Catherine (22 September 2023). "Croatian Museums Return Art Looted During Holocaust to Jewish Heir". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
- ^ "In apparent first, Croatia restores looted art to grandson of Holocaust victim". Times of Israel.
The artworks returned include paintings by André Derain, "Still Life With a Bottle," and Maurice de Vlaminick's "Landscape by the Water," which were held by the National Museum of Modern Art, and lithographs from the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts by Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne and Pierre Bonnard.
- ^ "National Museum of Modern Art – Nacionalni muzej moderne umjetnosti". Retrieved 14 February 2024.
- ^ "Blumengarten – Deutsch Heirs and Moderna Museet Stockholm — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "Nazi Victim's Heirs Urge Sweden to Settle 7-Year Art Dispute". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "Heirs of Otto Nathan Deutsch claim Nolde painting at Sweden's Moderna Museet - Commission for Art Recovery". commartrecovery.org. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "Swedish museum settles dispute on Nazi-looted art". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "New Restitution Claim Emerges in Sweden". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "What the Nazis Stole from Richard Neumann (and the search to get it back)". arthistorynews.com.
- ^ "Family given hope over art the Nazis stole". www.thejc.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
The heirs of Jenny Steiner have been battling for years for the return of Häuser am Meer, by the 20th-century impressionist Egon Schiele. Estimated to be worth £10m, it was taken after Mrs Steiner and her family fled Vienna in 1938.
- ^ "Vienna museum settles in looted painting case". Reuters. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Restitutionsbericht Universalmuseum Joanneum" (PDF).
- ^ "PROVENANCE RESEARCH AT THE LENTOS KUNSTMUSEUM LINZ Interim Report October 2019" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
2009 Gustav Klimt, Damenbildnis (Portrait Ria Munk III), 1917/18 Oil on canvas, 180.7 x 89.9 cm Restituted to the rightful heirs of Aranka Munk The portrait of the daughter of Viennese industrialists Alexander and Aranka Munk, Ria, who committed suicide at the age of 24 in 1911, was kept by her mother in the Munks' villa in Bad Aussee. In 1941, Aranka Munk was deported to Łódź, where she was subsequently murdered. After Aranka's deportation the portrait was unaccounted for. The circumstances under which it was acquired by Wolfgang Gurlitt, who sold it to the City of Linz in 1956, are likewise unclear. The City of Linz fully acknowledged that Aranka Munk was a victim of Nazi persecution and restituted the painting to her heirs in 2009.
- ^ "Rückgabebeirat: "Vier Bäume" von Egon Schiele wird restituiert | kurier.at". 23 January 2021. Archived from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ ttrenkler (6 March 2020). "Rückgabebeirat: "Vier Bäume" von Egon Schiele wird restituiert". kurier.at (in German). Retrieved 17 November 2021.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ a b c d "Linz restituiert Emil Noldes "Maiwiese" - Linz restitutes Emil Nolde's 'Meadow in May'". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
- ^ "Heirs to Auction Nazi-Looted Art from Albertina". Artnet News. 9 September 2014. Archived from the original on 4 December 2019. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
OTS reported in March that Adele Pächter, who was Jewish, was persecuted by the Nazis and was forced to dispose of her deceased husband's collection. Hermann Pächter had died in 1902. She was able to bring the collection to auction in 1940 via her son in law, under extreme pressure. In 1943, she was murdered at the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
- ^ "Heirs to Auction Nazi-Looted Art from Albertina". Artnet News. 9 September 2014. Archived from the original on 4 December 2019. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
The artwork to be sold at Villa Grisebach is Adolph von Menzel's gouache on paper Stehende Rüstungen (1886). It is estimated to fetch €100,000–150,000 at the auction this fall. The piece had been on display in Vienna's Albertina museum until research conducted by the Austrian government's Art Restitution Advisory Board determined that Adele Pächter "was forced to sell works" during the time of National Socialism in Germany. Florian Illies, a partner at Villa Grisebach, revealed to the Art Newspaper that the research conducted by the Austrian Art Restitution board also discovered other works by von Menzel that the Pächter family had to sell during Nazi regime.
- ^ "PROVENANCE RESEARCH AT THE LENTOS KUNSTMUSEUM LINZ Interim Report October 2019" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2021.
2015 Emil Nolde, Maienwiese (Maiwiese), 1915 Oil on canvas, 48 x 79 cm Restituted to the rightful heirs of Otto Siegfried Julius. Until September 1938, the painting was part of the collection of the Hamburg urologist Otto Siegfried Julius, who in 1938 fled from racist persecution first to Switzerland and then, in 1939, to the United States. Julius's Hamburg housekeeper tried to ship the priceless collection to Switzerland, but none of the works actually arrived in that country. In November 1953, the City of Linz acquired Emil Nolde's landscape Maienwiese from the Salzburg gallerist Friedrich Welz. How Welz came by the Nolde is unclear. On the recommendation of Austria's Art Restitution Board the City Council decided in favour of restitution in 2015.
- ^ "PROVENANCE RESEARCH AT THE LENTOS KUNSTMUSEUM LINZ Interim Report 2019" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2021.
1999. Lesser Ury, Die Näherin, 1883. Oil on canvas, 52 x 42.5 cm. Restituted to the rightful heirs of Fritz Loewenthal. Loewenthal's father-in-law William Bennigson was compelled to leave this painting and many other works of art in Berlin prior to his deportation and entrusted them to Wolfgang Gurlitt. In the presence of a witness Gurlitt then gave an undertaking to either return these works of art or to make full payment for them. As early as July 1950, Fritz Loewenthal, who had emigrated to Israel, contacted Wolfgang Gurlitt asking him, among other things, about the whereabouts of the Lesser Ury painting. Gurlitt refused to return the painting. In 1999, the City of Linz formally acknowledged that the Loewenthals had been persecuted and that the sale of the painting had taken place under duress. The painting was restituted
- ^ "PROVENANCE RESEARCH AT THE LENTOS KUNSTMUSEUM LINZ Interim Report October 2019" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
Acquired from Wolfgang Gurlitt in 1953–56, all six Romakos were part until 1938/39 of the collection of Oskar Reichel, a medical doctor in Vienna. The fact that as a victim of racist persecution Reichel was forced to sell up under duress after the Anschluss only became known to the City of Linz in the course of systematic provenance research. The paintings were restituted to the Reichels' legal successor. Today they are on display at the LENTOS on permanent loan.
- ^ "Austrian gallery ordered to return Nazi-stolen Romako works". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
Vienna's Albertina art gallery was told Tuesday to return six works by Anton Romako to the descendants of Jewish art collector Oskar Reichel, whose collection was stolen by the Nazis.
- ^ "In accordance with Section 3 of the Federal Law on the Restitution of Art Objects from Austrian Federal Museums and Collections (Art Restitution Act), Federal Law Gazette (BGBl. I) No. 181/1998 as amended by BGBl. I No. 117/2009, at its meeting on 2 March 2012, the Art Restitution Advisory Board unanimously adopted the following DECISION It is recommended to the Federal Minister of Education, Arts and Culture that the work listed in the Commission for Provenance Research dossier "Dr. Armin Reichmann" Anton Romako (1832–1889) Lying dog, Watercolour, 23.2 x 32 cm Albertina, Inv. No. 29226 should be transferred to the legal successors causa mortis of Dr. Armin Reichmann (1878 1942)" (PDF).
- ^ "Decisions » PROVENANCE RESEARCH AND RESTITUTION IN THE AUSTRIAN FEDERAL COLLECTIONS". 16 November 2021. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
- ^ "HITLER'S ART LOOT TO BE AUCTIONED; Bondy Collection, Recovered From Linz Museum, Will Be Offered Here on Thursday". The New York Times. 27 February 1949. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Shapreau, Carla J. "Austrian Marshall Plan Foundation Report, 2014 The Vienna Archives: Musical Expropriations During the Nazi Era and 21st Century Ramifications" (PDF).
Oscar Bondy was one of Vienna's most important art collectors and he also had a fine musical manuscript and instrument collection. After the Anschluss, the contents of Bondy's home was confiscated and the cultural items were divided up between several institutions.
- ^ Austrian Restitution Advisory Committee (5 November 2021). "Oscar Bondy Austrian Restitution Advisory Committee 2021-11-05" (PDF). provenienzforschung.gv.at.
- ^ "Decisions » Kommission für Provenienzforschung". 18 January 2021. Archived from the original on 18 January 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Dobrzynski, Judith H. (23 September 1999). "U.S. Warrant Halts the Return of a Schiele to Austria". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ Bohlen, Celestine (27 April 2002). "Judge Revives Case Of Nazi-Looted Art". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
In an opinion issued two weeks ago, Judge Michael B. Mukasey ruled that the painting, which had come to New York from a private Austrian museum, was stolen property and that a trial should be held to determine which of two competing claimants is the rightful owner.
- ^ Kennedy, Randy (20 July 2010). "Leopold Museum to Pay $19 Million for Painting Seized by Nazis". ArtsBeat. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "8. Beiratssitzung vom 27. Oktober 1999". provenienzforschung.gv.at (in German). Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Kommission für Provenienzforschung - Ergebnisse | Restitutionsberichte". 11 February 2008. Archived from the original on 11 February 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Blenkinsop, Philip (10 February 2022). "Belgium museum returns painting to Jewish family after 71 years". Reuters. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
BRUSSELS, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Belgium's leading art museum has returned a painting it held for 71 years to the great-grandchildren of a Jewish couple whose property was looted by the Nazis after they fled on the eve of World War Two. The family's Berlin-based law firm approached the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels more than five years ago and on Thursday, after a briefing signing ceremony, workers took down the painting and wheeled it off to be packed. "Altogether the family is looking for 30 artworks," said lawyer Imke Gielen. "This is the first that has been really identified because unfortunately we have no images of the missing paintings."
- ^ "Belgium returns painting looted by Nazis to Jewish family". The Brussels Times. Archived from the original on 14 February 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
- ^ Selvin, Claire (29 April 2021). "Düsseldorf Committee Votes to Return Franz Marc Painting to Former Owner's Heirs". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
Kurt Grawi bought the painting in 1928. His businesses and properties were seized by the Nazi Party in 1935, and in 1938, he was imprisoned at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Germany for several weeks. He wrote in a 1939 letter that he would use the funds from the sale of the work to flee Germany, via Belgium, for Chile.
- ^ "Stadt Düsseldorf gibt 14-Mio-Gemälde zurück an Erben". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
- ^ Greenberger, Alex (9 July 2021). "German City's Restitution of Franz Marc Painting Comes to a Standstill". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
- ^ "(#8) Wilhelm Leibl". Sothebys.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
Provenance. Deutscher Kunst-Verein (1898). Oscar Rothschild (acquired in the. Deutscher Kunst-Verein tombola on 29 November 1898). Dr Alexander Lewin, Berlin and Guben (co-owner and director of the Berlin-Gubener Hutfabrik AG). Expropriated from the above under the National Socialist regime. Deutsches Reich for the planned Hitler museum in Linz (by 1938). Central Collecting Point, Munich (by 1945). Bundesrepublik Deutschland (on loan to the Kunsthalle Bremen since 1966). Restituted to the heirs of Alexander Lewin (2009)
- ^ "Recommendation of the Advisory Commission for the Return of Cultural Property Seized as a Result of Nazi Persecution" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2021.
This case concerned the painting "Bauernmädchen ohne Hut mit weißem Halstuch" ('Peasant Girl without a Hat and with a White Headcloth') (1897) by Wilhelm Leibl. The Advisory Commission recommended that the German Federal Government return the piece to the heirs of Dr Alexander Lewin. The recommendation is based on the following facts: Dr Alexander Lewin (1879 – 1942) was the Chairman of the Board of Management at the hat manufacturer Berlin-Gubener Hutfabrik AG until 1938. His comprehensive art collection included Leibl's 'Peasant Girl'. In summer 1938, Dr Lewin emigrated to Switzerland as a result of persecution, having been identified as a so-called 'Jewish Mischling (half-breed) of the first degree'. At the beginning of September 1938, Dr Lewin left the Board of Management at Berlin-Gubener Hutfabrik AG and in early March 1939, he gave notification that he would not be returning to Germany, which led to him being denied access to his entire estate as a result of a so-called 'security order' issued on 10th March 1939. On 4th August 1941, the German Reichsminister of the Interior deprived Dr Lewin of his German citizenship. His property was seized from him. The painting 'Peasant Girl' had come into Dr Lewin's possession at 1930 at the latest. In May 1938, the commission agent Litthauer from Berlin tried to sell the piece to Galerie Heinemann in Munich at Lewin's request, but the gallery did not buy the painting. By spring 1939 at the latest, the painting ended up in the hands of the German Reich, namely in the "Fuehrerbau", Adolf Hitler's office building in Munich, where the artwork for the planned "Fuehrer Museum" for Hitler in Linz, Austria, was being gathered.
- ^ Thuy Vo, Lam. "Family, art experts squabble over returned expressionist masterpiece". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
The family says the Nazis forced the sale of the painting in the 1930s and Berlin officials call the return of Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's Berlin Street Scene belated justice - in line with other handovers of art lost by Jewish owners to confiscation, theft or forced sale.
- ^ "The Story of 'Street Scene': Restitution of Nazi Looted Art, Case and Controversy". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
Ludwig von Pufendorf, director of the Brücke Museum Foundation, talked of 'a business' that had 'nothing to do' with moral restitution. Such scarcely concealed antisemitic slurs provoked great concern.
- ^ "Berlin Street Fight - artnet Magazine". 16 November 2007. Archived from the original on 16 November 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Feldmann, Dr. Arthur". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "HCPO Gallery: Dr. Arthur Feldmann - biography". Department of Financial Services. Archived from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
The Feldmann Collection included Old Master of the German, Italian, Dutch, Flemish, and French Schools from the 15th to the 18th Centuries. His collection was well known internationally throughout the art world. Drawings from his collection were published in the most important and renowned art periodicals and written about by important and renowned art historians both before and after the war. On the day the Nazis entered Brno, March 15, 1939, the Gestapo confiscated Dr. Feldmann's villa, which contained amongst other possessions his valuable collection of drawings. Dr. Feldmann and his wife had to flee the villa within a couple of hours of the occupation. Shortly afterwards, Feldmann was arrested by the Gestapo, imprisoned and tortured at the infamous Špilberk prison and consequently died of a heart attack in March 1941. He was 64 at the time of his death.
- ^ "Restitution und Rückkauf der Zeichnung "Felsige Waldlandschaft mit weitem Ausblick" (um 1610/15) von Isaak Major" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 June 2016.
- ^ "15 June 2016: Kunsthalle Bremen returns and repurchases Isaak Major drawing from the Arthur Feldmann collection". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "SMB-digital | Selbstbildnis mit gelbem Hut". www.smb-digital.de. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
Provenienz – 5.6.1887 bis 1907 Nachlaß Marées (von Adolf von Hildebrand in San Francesco di Paolo bei Florenz aufgefunden) – Sammlung Adolf von Hildebrand, München/Florenz – bis 1935 Sammlung Max Silberberg, Breslau – 23.3.1935 Kunstauktion Paul Graupe, Berlin – 1935 bis 1999 Nationalgalerie, Berlin (Kauf) – 1999 bis 2002 Greta Silberberg, Erbin von Max Silberberg, Leicester (England) (Restitution)
- ^ Berman, Lazar. "Why is a German museum hanging a Nazi-looted painting backward?". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
The Nazis pressured Silberberg to sell his impressive art collection– which included Monet, Renoir, Degas, and Van Gogh — at an auction in Berlin in 1934. He and his wife were sent to a concentration camp in 1941, and were ultimately murdered in Auschwitz.
- ^ "From Delacroix to van Gogh - Max Silberberg's collection / Articles / Reading Room / Silesian Art Collections - Rariora Artis". 14 March 2011. Archived from the original on 14 March 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
- ^ "Heirs of Jewish Art Collectors Pursue Works Sold in Nazi Era". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "Bildnis Max John | Städtische Museen Freiburg". onlinesammlung.freiburg.de (in German). Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "Provenance research on Otto Dix's "Portrait of Max John", 1920 | Kulturgutverluste". kulturgutverluste.de. 31 May 2009. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ a b c "Heirs of Jewish art dealer sue German state for return of Nazi-looted artwork". The Times of Israel. JTA. Archived from the original on 7 December 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
Alfred Flechtheim was forced to leave paintings by Max Beckmann, Juan Gris and Paul Klee when he fled Berlin in May 1933
- ^ Elbaor, Caroline (7 December 2016). "Bavaria Sued in New York Over Contested Paintings". Artnet News. Archived from the original on 8 December 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- ^ a b c "Heirs of Jewish art dealer sue German state for return of Nazi-looted artwork | The Times of Israel". The Times of Israel. 7 December 2016. Archived from the original on 7 December 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- ^ "German Government Agrees to Return Oskar Kokoschka's "Portrait of Tilla Durieux" to Flechtheim's Heirs" (in Indonesian). Retrieved 6 February 2022.
- ^ "Nazi looted art cases remain unsolved mysteries | DW | 20.06.2013". Deutsche Welle. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
A prominent Oskar Kokoschka painting stolen by the Nazis is now to be returned to its rightful owners.
- ^ "Nazi looted art cases remain unsolved mysteries | Arts | DW.COM | 20.06.2013". DW (Deutsche Welle). 2 July 2015. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
On Monday June 17, 2013, the city authorities in Cologne announced that the painting would be returned to the family of Jewish art dealer Alfred Flechtheim, the former owner of the work. The return of the painting follows advice issued by a specialist arbitration committee and marks the end of four years of legal wrangling.
- ^ "Nazi-loot panel asks Sprengel Museum to return Schmidt-Rottluff work to heirs". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 10 January 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- ^ "Hanover museum returns Nazi-looted artwork – DW – 06/27/2017". dw.com. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- ^ Sontheimer, Michael (5 July 2012). "Flechtheim Heirs Wage Restitution Battle with German Museums". Der Spiegel. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "German museum agrees to pay to keep Nazi-looted painting". The Times of Israel.
- ^ "KVDB - Startseite - Vorbereitung zum Weinlesefest". kunstverwaltung.bund.de. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Search". www.lostart.de. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ a b c "Three paintings seized by Nazis to be reclaimed for London eyesight charity". jewishnews.timesofisrael.com. 5 January 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ "KVDB - Startseite - Das gutmütige Kind [Der Bettler]". kunstverwaltung.bund.de. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ "Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller - 19th Century Paintings 2021/06/07 - Realized price: EUR 296,100 - Dorotheum". www.dorotheum.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
Provenance: Oscar Löwenstein Collection (1868–1942), Vienna/London; Thence by descent to his widow Irma Löwenstein (1890–1975), Vienna/London; 1938 Forced sale to Maria Almas Dietrich, Munich; Führermuseum Linz, inv. no. 100; 1945 Central Collecting Point, Munich, inv. no. 8593; 1949 Regional Finance Office, Berlin; On loan from the Federal Republic of Germany to the German Historical Museum, Berlin and the Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal.2019 Restitution to the heirs of Oscar and Irma Löwenstein. The painting is being sold for the benefit of the "sight loss charity" of the Vision Foundation, UK.
- ^ "KVDB - Startseite - Besuch der Großeltern". kunstverwaltung.bund.de. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
Bis zum Jahre 1938 befand sich das Gemälde im Eigentum von Irma Löwenstein (1892–?), geb. Samec, Wien.[2] Sie erwarb es höchstwahrscheinlich im Jahre 1934 als Schenkung ihres Ehemannes Oscar Löwenstein (1868–vermutlich 1955),[3] dem Gründer und Herausgeber der Tageszeitung „Neues Wiener Journal".[4]
- ^ "Art treasure looted by Nazis finally returned to family". The Guardian. 14 March 2000. Archived from the original on 24 August 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
After decades of the family being told by the German authorities that they had no case in law, because their claim was lodged too late, it took just 10 weeks to resolve the case.
- ^ "Looted Art Commission - The Glanville Case". www.lootedartcommission.com. Archived from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ a b "Staatsgalerie Stuttgart (State Gallery Stuttgart)". www.lootedart.com. Archived from the original on 25 November 2010. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
Museum Staatsgalerie Stuttgart (State Gallery Stuttgart). Research into Nazi-confiscated works of art in the museum's collection. In 2000 the painting Marchesa Imperiale mit Tochter (Marchesa Imperiale with her daughter) by Rubens in the museum's collection was claimed by a French legal firm on behalf of the community of heirs of Jacob and Rosa Oppenheimer. The museum had purchased the painting in 1964 from a private collector. Research by the museum confirmed that the collector had bought it at an auction at Berlin dealer Paul Graupe on 26/27 April 1935. The auction was a forced sale of the works of Berlin art firms Galerie Van Diemen & Co./GmbH, Altkunst und Antiquitäten/GmbH and Dr. Otto Burchard & Co GmbH.
- ^ "Egon Schiele Work Restituted by Museum Ludwig to Sell at Sotheby's". lootedart.com. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Rieger, Heinrich". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "PROPERTY FROM THE HEIRS OF HEINRICH RIEGER. Egon Schiele. Kauernder weiblicher Akt (Crouching Female Nude)". sothebys.
Heinrich Rieger, Vienna (acquired before 1938) . Walter Geyerhahn, Rio de Janeiro (until 1965). Marianne Feilchenfeldt, Zurich (acquired from the above through Christian M. Nebehay, Vienna). Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne (acquired from the above through the Freunde des Wallraf-Richartz-Museums in July 1966). Museum Ludwig, Cologne (transferred from the above in 1976). Restituted to the present owner in 2021
- ^ "Advisory Commission on the return of cultural property seized as a result of Nazi persecution, especially Jewish property Office: Seydelstr. 18, 10117 Berlin Recommendation of the Advisory Commission in the case of the heirs of Heinrich Rieger v. The City of Cologne" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 May 2021. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
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- ^ "The art of restitution". The Jerusalem Post. 14 February 2008. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "Germans Refuse to Return Picasso Painting Sold by Jewish Man Fleeing the Nazis". Algemeiner.com. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ Bert, Peter (3 April 2013). "Art Law: Restitution Claim for Picasso's "Madame Soler" Against Bavaria Brought in New York | Dispute Resolution Germany". Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ Voss, Julia. "Rechtsstreit um Picasso: Der längere Hebel". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ "Pablo Picasso painting sought by descendants of Jewish banker". Los Angeles Times. 1 April 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ Hickley, Catherine (8 June 2021). "Was This Picasso Lost Because of the Nazis? Heirs and Bavaria Disagree". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 9 June 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
- ^ "Mahler-Werfel restitution case revived, and put on hold". www.theartnewspaper.com. 30 September 1999. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
- ^ a b Riding, Alan (9 November 2006). "After 60 Years, Austria Will Return a Munch Work to a Mahler Heir". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
- ^ Collett-White, Mike (9 November 2006). "Mahler heir celebrates return of Munch painting". Reuters. Archived from the original on 30 March 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
- ^ "Family gets back looted Munch masterpiece after 53-year battle". The Guardian. 9 November 2006. Archived from the original on 30 August 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
- ^ "Panel urges return of Hitler's Bellotto paintings to heirs of Jewish retail magnate". www.theartnewspaper.com. 27 March 2019. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Emden, Max James". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ Baier, Uta (22 December 2005). "Restitution: Wem gehört der Zwingergraben?". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 24 November 2019.
- ^ "Sotheby's to auction £4m restituted Bellotto painting that Jewish retail magnate was forced to sell to Hitler". www.theartnewspaper.com. 8 July 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ a b "National Gallery of Art Returns World War II-Era Duress-Sale Drawing to Heirs". www.nga.gov. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
The National Gallery of Art has returned a drawing in its collection, A Branch with Shriveled Leaves (1817) by 19th-century German artist Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, to the heirs of Dr. Marianne Schmidl (1890–1942). As a result of compelling new biographical information on Dr. Schmidl and documentation provided by her heirs, the Gallery has concluded the known 1939 sale of the drawing was a direct result of the persecution by the Nazis of Dr. Schmidl, the owner of the drawing
- ^ a b "Restituted German Romantic drawing for sale at Berlin auction in November". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Goudstikker, Jacques". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ [dead link ], 27 November 2010
- ^ SPIEGEL, Erich Wiedemann, DER (11 April 2006). "Nazi-Era Profiteering: Holland Returns Art Stolen from a Jewish Collector". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Jüdische Sammler und Kunsthändler (Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung und Enteignung) - Freund, Julius". www.lostart.de. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ Homola, Victor (17 January 2005). "Arts, Briefly; German Panel Recommends Return of Looted Art (Published 2005)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "HCPO Gallery: The Ismar Littman Collection". Department of Financial Services. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Restitution of Looted Art: From the Collection of an Outlaw" (PDF).
- ^ "German Lost Art Foundation - News - Oetker art collection restitutes Nazi-confiscated property". www.kulturgutverluste.de. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
Leo Bendel, a Polish tobacco dealer, lived with his wife Else Bendel (née Golze) in Berlin and Vienna until he lost his job in 1935 due to his Jewish faith and shortly thereafter gave up his residence in Berlin. He sold the painting to Galerie Heinemann in Munich in 1937. In 1938, Leo Bendel gave up his Polish citizenship and he and his wife converted to Catholicism. Nevertheless, in September 1939 he was arrested by the Nazis in Vienna and deported to Buchenwald concentration camp, where he was murdered in March 1940. His non-Jewish wife survived.
- ^ "Dr Oetker returns painting to heirs of Jewish tobacco dealer murdered by the Nazis | The Art Newspaper". 22 November 2019. Archived from the original on 22 November 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ [dead link ]
- ^ [dead link ]
- ^ "RESOLVED STOLEN ART CLAIMS: CLAIMS FOR ART STOLEN DURING THE NAZI ERA AND WORLD WAR II, INCLUDING NAZI-LOOTED ART AND TROPHY ART*" (PDF).
- ^ "FBI New York Art Crime Team Returns Vases Stolen During Nazi Rule in Germany — FBI". www.fbi.gov. FBI. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
Harry and Lucie Mayer Fuld lived in Germany in the 1930s. Mr. Fuld died in 1932. The Nazis took power in 1933, seizing Lucie's bank accounts and placing an exit tax on her if she left the country. She fled Germany in 1939 with only a few of her possessions, leaving behind her home and much of the artwork in it. In July 1940, an auction house in Berlin listed for sale items from the Fuld's estate. The Nazi government determined proceeds from the auction satisfied the exit tax they put on Lucie
- ^ [dead link ]
- ^ "Rosenberg Heirs' Claim to Gurlitt Matisse Stalled". Artnet News. 24 February 2015. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Affaire Gurlitt: Femme assise de Matisse rendu à ses héritiers". Le Figaro. 15 May 2015.
- ^ "Pillées sous l'Occupation, trois œuvres officiellement restituées aux héritiers d'Armand Dorville | Emmanuelle Polack Site officiel" (in French). Retrieved 3 December 2020.
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- ^ "German Lost Art Foundation - News - Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media restitutes Nazi-confiscated property from the Gurlitt estate". www.kulturgutverluste.de. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
- ^ "KVDB - Startseite - Wildbach Strubb [Der Wildbach Strubb bei Ischl]". kunstverwaltung.bund.de. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
- ^ "German Lost Art Foundation - News - German government restitutes Nazi-confiscated property". www.kulturgutverluste.de. Archived from the original on 26 September 2020. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
- ^ "FERDINAND GEORG WALDMÜLLER (VIENNA 1793-1865 HINTERBRÜHL)". www.christies.com. Archived from the original on 1 May 2021. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
Dr. Hermann Eissler (1860-1953), Vienna, by 1930. Banned from export under the Nazi regime and held in the apartment of the above, 29 October 1938. Berta Morelli (1893 – 1975), Vienna, by December 1938, acquired as a gift from her father, Dr Hermann Eissler. Purchased by Maria Almas Dietrich, Munich, together with two other paintings by Waldmüller from the above and Hortense Eissler for Reich Chancellery in May 1939. Reich Chancellery, by whom acquired from the above as part of the collection for the planned Linz Museum (Linz no. 734). Recovered by the Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives Section for the Salt Mines, Alt Aussee (no. 6442), and transferred to the Central Collecting Point, Munich, 22 October 1945 (MCCP no. 11228). with Galerie Nathan, Zurich. Transferred into the custody of the Bavarian Ministerpräsident, December 1948, thereafter into the custody of the German federal government, June 1949. On loan from the above to the Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, 1966 (inv. no. Lg 755). Restituted to the heirs of Dr Herman Eissler in 2020.
- ^ "KVDB - Startseite - Der Altausseer See gegen den Dachstein [Der Dachstein von Alt-Aussee gesehen]". kunstverwaltung.bund.de. Archived from the original on 18 May 2021. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
- ^ "Emmanuelle Polack". www.lhistoire.fr (in French). Retrieved 12 December 2020.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 441 et suivantes.
- ^ "National Gallery to return painting looted by Nazis (Piece is first plundered art found in Canada)". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 439 et suivantes.
- ^ "Paintings stolen by Nazis still hang in Canadian galleries. Paltry government funding is hampering efforts to identify and return them". www.lootedart.com. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
In the late 1990s, the National Gallery of Canada discovered that Édouard Vuillard's The Salon of Madame Aron (1904, reworked in 1934), which it had purchased in 1956, belonged to the Lindon family in France. The gallery contacted the descendant who, surprisingly, insisted that the artwork had never belonged to his family. The NGC maintained that the evidence was incontrovertible and encouraged the Lindon family to make a claim, which it finally did in 2003. The gallery returned the work in 2006.
- ^ Cascone, Sarah (14 January 2020). "The Descendants of a Jewish Art Collector Are Suing the Stedelijk Over a Kandinsky They Say Is Rightfully Theirs". Artnet News. Archived from the original on 8 December 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ Moynihan, Colin (28 February 2022). "Kandinsky Painting Returned to Jewish Heirs by Amsterdam Museum". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "Restitutions and Case News: Dutch Restitutions Committee Developments 2018-2019". www.lootedart.com. Archived from the original on 27 June 2020. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ "Dutch government criticizes country's own Holocaust restitution policy that has blocked families from return of stolen art". www.lootedart.com. JTA. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
The Süddeutsche Zeitung daily in Germany ridiculed the committee's argument, summarizing its conclusion to mean "Too pretty to give back."
- ^ Brown, Kate (7 December 2020). "A Government-Commissioned Report Admonishes the Netherlands for Stacking Odds Against Those Seeking the Return of Nazi-Looted Art". Artnet News. Archived from the original on 13 December 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ Kohnstamm, Jacob (1 December 2021). "Restitutiecommissie Newsletter" (PDF). Restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ Ministerie van Onderwijs, Cultuur en Wetenschap (7 December 2020). "Striving for Justice - Advies - Raad voor Cultuur". www.raadvoorcultuur.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ Siegal, Nina (7 December 2020). "Dutch Panel for Looted Art Claims Must Change Course, Report Finds". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ "Decree Establishing a Restitutions Committee" (PDF). Lootedart.com. 22 April 2021. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
- ^ Moynihan, Colin (28 February 2022). "Kandinsky Painting Returned to Jewish Heirs by Amsterdam Museum". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ "Seven pieces of maiolica from the former Pringsheim Collection, inv. nos. A 3582, A 3602, A 3619, A 3638, A 3648, A 3649, A 3653" (PDF). boijmans.nl.
- ^ "Works with a suspicious provenance". Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. Retrieved 16 February 2024.
- ^ Siegal, Nina (11 November 2018). "In a Netherlands Museum Director, the Nazis Found an Ally". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 12 November 2018. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
Mr. Hannema, who served as the top museum official for the Dutch shadow government set up by the Nazis, must have known what sort of ugly business the art clearing house, the Mühlmann Agency, was up to, historians say. He bought the Leefsmas' painting, which would remain in the Dutch museum for the next 57 years until its return to the heirs of the family in 2000.
- ^ "Restitutions, ongoing and settled restitution claims". Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ a b "Stettiner | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Advisory Committee on the Assessment of Restitution Applications (The Restitutions Committee)". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ a b "The Restitutions Committee". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Christ and the Samaritan Woman at the Well by B. Strozzi (Semmel/De Fundatie) | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Dutch museum settles with Jewish businessman's heirs on painting sold in Nazi era, defying government panel". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 19 April 2021. Archived from the original on 15 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
Soon after Kohnstamm's report was published, the Museum de Fundatie contacted Semmel's heirs to resolve the long-running dispute.
- ^ "Ferdinand Bol (Dordrecht 1616-1680 Amsterdam)". www.christies.com. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Croucher, Shane (28 June 2019). "Jewish heirs of Nazi-looted art have spent decades trying to get it back. A landmark Dutch ruling might make it happen". Newsweek. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ a b "Lierens | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Two paintings restituted to the heirs of Jacob Lierens highlight Old Masters Evening sale". artdaily.com. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Greenberger, Alex (28 June 2021). "Dutch Government to Lead Major Investigation Into Nazi-Looted Art: 'An Important Step Forward'". ARTnews.com. Archived from the original on 28 June 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ Siegal, Nina (12 May 2017). "Are the Dutch Lagging in Efforts to Return Art Looted by the Nazis?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
- ^ a b "Jan Josefsz. van Goyen (Leiden 1596-1656 The Hague)". www.christies.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Hamburger (II) | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Studio of Bernard van Orley (Brussels c. 1488-1541)". www.christies.com. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Larsen | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
The Restitutions Committee advises the Minister for Education, Culture and Science to grant the application for restitution by the applicants and to return the artworks NK 1410, NK 1412, NK 1414, NK 1417, NK 1420, NK 1424, NK 1428, NK 1441, NK 1447, NK 1451, NK 2243 and NK 2463 to the persons entitled to the said works. In addition, the Restitutions Committee advises the Minister for Education, Culture and Science to impose a payment obligation to the amount of EUR 325,000 in return for the restitution. Adopted at the meeting of 1 July 2009 by W.J.M. Davids (chair), J.Th.M. Bank, J.C.M. Leijten, P.J.N. van Os, E.J. van Straaten, H.M. Verrijn Stuart, I.C. van der Vlies (vice-chair), and signed by the chair and the secretary. (W.J.M. Davids, chair)(E. Campfens, secretary)
- ^ a b "Oppenheimer | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ a b c d e "The Netherlands is still hoarding a massive collection of art looted from Jews by Nazis - Europe - Haaretz.com". Haaretz. 8 September 2020. Archived from the original on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ "Alfred and Fanny Mautner | Restitutiecommissie". www.restitutiecommissie.nl. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ "The Netherlands Is Still Hoarding a Massive Collection of Art Looted From Jews by Nazis". Haaretz. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
During the war, Jacques Hedeman, a textile merchant, stored a painting he owned by the 17th-century artist Jacob Gerritsz, in the vault of an Amsterdam bank, before escaping to Switzerland. The bank turned the painting, "Shepherdess with Child in Landscape," over to the Germans. In 2002, the Dordrecht Museum purchased the work from a private individual in Germany.
- ^ Driessen, Dennis (28 January 2015). "Dordrechts Museum buys Jacob Cuyp again". CODART. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "2008 Report of the Advisory Committee on the Assessment of Restitution Application for items of Cultural Value and the Second World War" (PDF). 14 November 2021. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 November 2021. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
- ^ Siegal, Nina (7 December 2020). "Dutch Panel for Looted Art Claims Must Change Course, Report Finds". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 29 June 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "A Spanish Museum Can Keep a Nazi-Looted Camille Pissarro Painting Despite Family's Objections, an Appeals Court Rules". Artnet News. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "US appeals court rules—with regret—that Thyssen-Bornemisza Foundation can keep Nazi-looted Pissarro". www.theartnewspaper.com. 19 August 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "Spanish museum returns paintings plundered by Nazi forces to Poland". euronews. 27 January 2023. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ "Composition with Blue". philamuseum.org. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
Consigned by the artist to Sophie Küppers (1891-1978), Hanover, Germany, 1926(?) [1]; Hanover Provinzialmuseum/Landesmuseum, Hanover, Germany, 1926(?)-August 17, 1937 [2]; confiscated by the Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda, Berlin, and stored in Schloss Niederschönhausen, EK inventory number 7035, August 17, 1937 – January 27, 1939 [3]; sold to Buch- und Kunsthandlung Karl Buchholz, Berlin, January 27, 1939; with Curt Valentin, Buchholz Gallery, New York, 1939 [4]; sold to A. E. Gallatin (1881-1952), New York, 24 August 1939 [5]; bequest to PMA, 1952.1.
- ^ "Mondrian at the Philadelphia Museum of Art is Nazi loot, heirs allege". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 14 December 2021. Archived from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
- ^ Kutner, Max (4 October 2016). "How a painting stolen by the Nazis ended up at the University of Oklahoma". Newsweek. Archived from the original on 9 October 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
After the Swiss court decision, the painting crossed the Atlantic and made its way to a gallery in New York City. In 1957, a wealthy woman from Oklahoma bought it. Clara Weitzenhoffer's father and husband were Oklahoma oilmen, and she channeled her fortune into collecting English furniture, Chinese porcelain and paintings resembling her beloved Dalmatians.
- ^ Commons, Wikimedia (22 January 2014). "French Woman Sues University of Oklahoma to Recover Nazi-Looted Art". The Forward. Archived from the original on 16 April 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
In 1953, he sued Swiss art dealer Christoph Bernoulli, who had bought the Pissarro work. A Swiss judge dismissed the suit, saying a five-year window for such lawsuits had passed
- ^ Forbes, Alexander (13 November 2014). "American Association of Museums Goes Easy on Nazi Loot". Artnet News. Archived from the original on 27 November 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ Carvajal, Doreen (17 December 2020). "Will a Looted Pissarro End Up in Oklahoma, or France?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "French woman faces court threat in 'quest' to win back Nazi-looted Pissarro". The Guardian. 8 February 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "'I Have No Other Choice': Holocaust Survivor Relinquishes Her Claim to a Looted Camille Pissarro Painting | Artnet News". 14 November 2021. Archived from the original on 14 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "VINCENT VAN GOGH (1853-1890)". www.christies.com. Archived from the original on 12 February 2022. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
Theo van Gogh, Paris (acquired from the artist). Johanna van Gogh-Bonger, Paris (by descent from the above). Gustave Fayet, Igny (acquired from the above, January 1907). Galerie E. Druet, Paris. Max Meirowsky, Berlin, later Amsterdam and Geneva (acquired from the above, 1913, until circa 1938). Paul Graupe & Cie., Paris (circa 1938). Alexandrine de Rothschild, Paris (by 1940). Seized from the above during the Occupation of France and transferred to the Jeu de Paume, Paris (April 1941); transferred to Schloss Kogl, St. Georgen im Attergau (18 June 1941; ERR no. R 905). Private collection. Wildenstein & Co. Inc., New York (acquired from the above, 1978). Acquired from the above by the late owner, 1979.
- ^ "VINCENT VAN GOGH (1853-1890) Meules de blé gouache, watercolor, pen and brush and black ink over pencil on paper 19 x 23 ¾ in. (48.5 x 60.4 cm.) Executed in Arles in June 1888". www.christies.com. Christies. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
Please note that the present work is being offered for sale pursuant to a settlement agreement between the current owner, the heir of Max Meirowsky and heirs of Alexandrine de Rothschild. The settlement agreement resolves the dispute over ownership of the work and title will pass to the successful bidder.
- ^ "A Formerly Looted Van Gogh Is Being Auctioned Off by Christie's in November". Observer. 15 October 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ Matthews • •, Karen. "Van Gogh Artwork Looted by Nazis to Be Auctioned by Christie's". NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
It was purchased in 1913 by industrialist Max Meirowsky, who fled Germany for Amsterdam in 1938 fearing Nazi persecution. Meirowsky entrusted "Wheatstacks" to a Paris-based art dealer, who sold it to Alexandrine de Rothschild, a member of the renowned Jewish banking family. Rothschild fled to Switzerland at the onset of World War II and her art collection, including the van Gogh watercolor, was confiscated by the Nazis during the Occupation.
- ^ Villa, Angelica (12 November 2021). "Van Gogh, Warhol Bring Christie's Modern Art Sales to $751.9 M.: 'You Won't Find Another One of These Soon'". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
- ^ "Stunning $30m Van Gogh watercolour resurfaces at Christie's New York following complex behind-the-scenes deal". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 14 October 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
After the war De Rothschild tried to recover Wheatstacks but failed. The watercolour's immediate post-war history is unclear, but in 1978 it was with the New York branch of the Wildenstein gallery, owned by a Parisian-based Jewish family. Wildenstein sold the Van Gogh to Cox the following year.
- ^ "Ernst Ludwig Kirchner : Autostrasse im Taunus, Created between December 1915 and July 1916 during one of the three stays in Königstein in the Sanatorium Kohnstamm | Galerie Kornfeld Auktionen Bern". 3 August 2023. Archived from the original on 3 August 2023. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
Provenance: Ludwig and Rosi Fischer, Frankfurt a/M, probably from 1916. Max Fischer (son), Frankfurt a/M, from 1924. Ferdinand Moeller, Berlin, on commission in 1931. Kurt Feldhäuser, Berlin and other places of residence, 1933 until 1945. Marie-Luise Feldhäuser, from 1945, relocated to New York in 1948. E. Weyhe, New York, from 1951, label on verso. Charles and Elisabeth R. Parkhurst, Oberlin, Ohio. Elisabeth R. Murphy, born Parkhurst. Sotheby's, New York, 9 May 2002, cat. no. 203. Private collection, Germany
- ^ "Virginia Museum of Art Acquires Work by German Expressionist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. The Restituted Painting Rejoins the Ludwig and Rosy Fischer Collection" (PDF). Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
- ^ Villa, Angelica (16 April 2021). "Cranach Painting Sold Under Duress During World War II to Be Auctioned as Part of Legal Settlement". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
At age 75, Eisenmann was arrested and sent to the Theriesenstandt Ghetto in September 1942 and eventually killed at the Treblinka concentration camp. Her estate was later seized and auctioned off.
- ^ Villa, Angelica (16 April 2021). "Cranach Painting Sold Under Duress During World War II to Be Auctioned as Part of Legal Settlement". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
- ^ "Landscape with Smokestacks – Friedrich Gutmann Heirs and Daniel Searle — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
- ^ "Editorial, "Shame, shame, shame," Chicago Jewish Star, August 21, 1998, p. 4;". Chicago Jewish Star. 21 August 1998.
- ^ Dobrzynski, Judith H. (14 August 1998). "Settlement in Dispute Over a Painting Looted by Nazis". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
- ^ Goodman, Simon (2015). The Orpheus Clock: the search for my family's art treasures stolen by the Nazis (First Scribner hardcover ed.). New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-1-4516-9763-6.
- ^ "FindLaw's United States Ninth Circuit case and opinions". Findlaw. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Ownership of Nazi-looted art 'Adam' and 'Eve' at Pasadena's Norton Simon Museum disputed". Pasadena Star News. 25 June 2014. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
In 1971, Spencer Samuels, a New York art dealer, acquired the Cranachs from Stroganoff, which were sold to the Norton Simon Art Foundation. The Norton Simon said in a statement it believes the Dutch government transferred the paintings to the Stroganoff family as a restitution of claims that arose from the auction before the war. In her complaint, von Saher said the paintings were wrongly returned to Stroganoff because although the Cranachs were sold with Stroganoff's collection, the diptych had come from the Church of the Holy Trinity and were not owned by Stroganoff.
- ^ "Why the Norton Simon Can Legally Keep Nazi Plunder". Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences. 24 September 2019. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Who really owns this Schiele watercolour Portrait of the Artist's Wife? | The Art Newspaper". 10 May 2021. Archived from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
- ^ "A Three-Way Ownership Battle over Egon Schiele Watercolor". Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences. 6 November 2019. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
- ^ "Robert Owen Lehman Found. v. Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien, 2022 N.Y. Slip Op. 7346 | Casetext Search + Citator". casetext.com. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
- ^ a b "Did the Metropolitan Museum cover up its acquisition of a Nazi-looted Van Gogh? A new lawsuit alleges so". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 20 December 2022. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
- ^ Article, Sarah Cascone ShareShare This (19 December 2022). "The Heirs of a Jewish Art Collector Are Suing the Met Museum for Selling a Van Gogh Painting They Say Was Plundered by Nazis". Artnet News. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
- ^ "Le Met accusé de s'être débarrassé d'un Van Gogh volé par les Nazis". Beaux Arts (in French). 29 December 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
- ^ a b "Seeking return of Van Gogh Sunflowers painting sold under Nazi coercion, German Jewish banker's heirs sue Japanese insurance company". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 16 December 2022. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
- ^ "View of Beverwijk – Works – Museum of Fine Arts, Boston". 25 January 2022. Archived from the original on 25 January 2022. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
The painting was included in a 1998 publication on Hungarian war losses, but because it was published with an incorrect image and description, the MFA was not aware that the View of Beverwijk had belonged to Chorin or was considered missing
- ^ "MFA returns painting stolen from Jewish collector during WWII". www.wbur.org. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
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- ^ Article, Henri Neuendorf ShareShare This (17 November 2015). "MoMA Restitutes Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Artwork". Artnet News. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- ^ "Museum of Modern Art Returns Painting to Heirs of Man Who Fled Nazis". wsj.com.
Leah Dickerman, MoMA's curator of painting and sculpture, said Mr. Rowland initially approached the museum about the Kirchner in 2004. The museum dismissed his claim, she said, because he mistook "Sand Hills" for another work that had been seized by the Nazis and eventually wound up in the Folkwang Museum in Essen, Germany.
- ^ "Adoration of the Magi – Gentili di Giuseppe Heirs and Museum of Fine Arts Boston — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
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- ^ "Affaire Buste d'un jeune garçon – Héritiers Gentili di Giuseppe et Art Institute de Chicago".
- ^ Nazi Looted Monet artwork
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- ^ a b "" Panama papers " : les documents révèlent le véritable propriétaire d'un Modigliani disparu". Le Monde.fr (in French). 8 April 2016. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- ^ "New evidence cited in restitution claim for Panama Papers Modigliani". www.theartnewspaper.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
Stettiner was a Jewish art dealer who fled Paris before the Germans invaded, leaving his valuable art collection behind. His property was sold off by an administrator appointed by the Nazi occupiers. He tried to recover his lost Modigliani after the war. A public investigator discovered that it had been purchased by a man named Jean Van der Klip in 1944 and Stettiner won a lawsuit that entitled him to regain possession of it. Confronted by a bailiff in 1947, Van der Klip claimed he had already sold it on to a buyer, who, in turn, said he had sold it to a US officer.
- ^ "Int'l Art Ctr. v. Estate of Stettiner (In re Estate of Stettiner), 148 A.D.3d 184 | Casetext Search + Citator". casetext.com. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- ^ Riding, Alan (3 September 1997). "Collector's Family Tries to Illuminate the Past of Manuscripts in France". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 7 November 2012. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
- ^ "Warin v Wildenstein & Co., Inc". Justia Law. Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
Plaintiffs Frances Warin, individually and En Memoire D'Alphonse Kann, an unincorporated association of plaintiff Warin's relatives, as successors-in-interest to Alphonse Kann, seek to recover from the defendants eight rare illuminated manuscripts which plaintiffs claim were stolen by the Nazis from Mr. Kann's residence at 7 rue des B cherons in Saint Germaine-en-Laye, a small town on the outskirts of Paris, in October 1940, and which plaintiffs claim are now wrongfully in the possession of the defendants Wildenstein & Co., Inc., a New York corporation, Daniel Wildenstein, Alec Wildenstein and Guy Wildenstein.
- ^ "Warin v Wildenstein & Co., Inc". Justia Law. Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
- ^ a b "Picasso paintings to remain in New York museums following settlement". The Guardian. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- ^ Kennedy, Randy (2 February 2009). "Museums and Heirs Settle Dispute Over Picasso". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- ^ a b c d Graham Bowley (1 October 2016). "Met Picasso Belonged to Family That Fled Nazis, Suit Says". New York Times.
- ^ a b *Zuckerman v. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 307 F. Supp. 3d 304 (S.D.N.Y. 2018), aff'd, 928 F. 3d 186 (2d Cir. 2019).
- Judge rules against heir who wanted Met to return a Picasso, Associated Press (7 February 2018).
- US Appeals Court Dismisses Ownership Claim over Picasso, Art Forum (27 June 2019).
- ^ a b "New York woman falls, rips Picasso painting". Agence France-Presse. 25 January 2010. Archived from the original on 28 January 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
- ^ critic, Howard Reich, Tribune arts. "$6.5 million will end Picasso fight". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Hartocollis, Anemona (29 April 2018). "Despite Court Ruling, Christie's Pulls Painting From Auction". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 29 April 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Lloyd Webber's Picasso to be sold after Nazi row settled - Yahoo! News". 25 March 2010. Archived from the original on 25 March 2010. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Greenberger, Alex (1 April 2020). "To Avoid Lawsuit, National Gallery of Art Returns Picasso Work to Heirs of German-Jewish Banker". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Jackson, Sarah (2008). Jackson Speech for Sothebys Symposium in Amsterdam.doc "Sarah Jackson Speech for Sothebys Symposium in Amsterdam". LootedArt.com. Art Loss Register.
{{cite web}}
: Check|url=
value (help)[permanent dead link ] - ^ "Nature morte au tableau de Picasso – Héritiers Schlesinger et Phillips — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ "PICASSO'S STILL LIFE WITH PORTRAIT TO BE OFFERED AT CHRISTIE'S NEW YORK" (PDF).
The painting comes to auction following a settlement between the current owner, Duncan V. Phillips, grandson of the legendary collector, Duncan C. Phillips, founder of The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., and the heirs of its pre-World War II owner, Ernst Schlesinger, a collector from Hamburg.
- ^ Schiele, Egon (1916), Russian War Prisoner, retrieved 30 November 2024
- ^ "Holocaust victim's heirs challenge Art Institute of Chicago's artwork ownership in appeals court". courthousenews.com. Retrieved 30 November 2024.
- ^ "TIMOTHY REIF, DAVID FRAENKEL, as Co-Trustee of the Leon Fischer Trust for the Life and Work of Fritz Grlflnbaum, MILOS VAVRA, Plaint %'-Counter-Defendants-Appellants,_ V. _ THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO, Defendant-Counter-Claimant-Appellee. ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK" (PDF).
- ^ Gardner, Eriq (6 November 2023). "The Art World's Russian Prisoner Dilemma". Puck. Retrieved 30 November 2024.
- ^ "Liberation of Saint Peter from Prison – Feldmann Heirs and Private Person — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Looted Drawing Returned to Heirs of Original Owner October 30, 2007". Archived from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "IMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ART DAY SALE Pierre-Auguste Renoir LE POIRIER".
- ^ Kinsella, Eileen (13 September 2011). "Potential Restitution Claim for Renoir Prompts Preemptive Suit". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Dan Hinkel. "Lawsuit settled over Renoir painting purportedly lost in Nazi persecution". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Hearst Castle gives back art looted by Nazis | The Seattle Times". 22 August 2017. Archived from the original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
They also conferred with the San Diego Museum of Art, which had settled with relatives in 2004 over their claim for Peter Paul Rubens' "Allegory of Eternity."
- ^ "Leopold Museum Defends Against Restitution Claims". Artnet News. 5 November 2014. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
- ^ Dobrzynski, Judith H. (8 January 1998). "District Attorney Enters Dispute Over Artworks (Published 1998)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "VMFA Board of Trustees Votes to Return Nazi-Looted Painting - VMFA Press Room". 10 October 2018. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Rummell, Nick (10 July 2019). "Heirs of Holocaust Victim Prevail in Art-Recovery Case". Courthouse News Service. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Bowley, Graham (26 February 2020). "Met Museum Adjusts Painting's History to Note Former Jewish Owner (Published 2020)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
Mr. Aram fought for decades, unsuccessfully, to reclaim the painting, which he argued had been illegally taken by a businessman, Oskar Sommer, to whom he sold his home in Germany.
- ^ Bowley, Graham (1 March 2020). "Met Museum Adjusts Painting's History to Note Former Jewish Owner". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 1 March 2020. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
"We updated the online provenance information, with the confirmation that the painting in dispute between Aram and Sommers was the same as the Met's," the museum said in a statement.
- ^ "The MFA's Painting Worth A Thousand Words". www.wbur.org. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ "Walter Westfeld painting at MFA Boston June 2011: Provenance Outreach Conducted by Museum of Fine Arts Boston Results in Agreement to Retain Ownership of Eglon Van der Neer's 'Portrait of a man and woman in an interior'". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
- ^ "Painting Nazis Took Is Returned To Family (Published 2004)". The New York Times. Associated Press. 4 April 2004. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ Deseret (26 February 2004). "Utah art found to be Nazi loot". Deseret News. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "Happy ending for looted Courbet painting". NBC News. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ Meier, Barry (24 January 2004). "Painting Ordered Back to Greece (Published 2004)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "Owner of Chagall Painting Looted by Nazis Wins It Back in U.S. Court". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 17 November 1965. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ [dead link ]; Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 326
- ^ "Le Grand Pont – Weinmann Heirs and Yale University Art Gallery — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Archived from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
1938: The Weinmann family fled Germany from Nazi persecution. The family's assets in Germany were seized and liquidated by the Nazis.[4] Herbert Schaefer, a German lawyer and member of the anti-Semitic "brown shirts", acquired the painting around the same time.
- ^ Grandjean, Patricia (18 March 2001). "A Nazi Cloud Hangs Over a Painting on Loan to Yale". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 20 February 2022.
As a result of this case, the Yale Art Gallery has been thrown in the role of intermediary for Mr. Schaefer. Since 1981, he has placed 47 paintings in the university's care.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 423; [dead link ]
- ^ Artdaily. "Virginia Museum To Return Painting Stolen By Nazis". artdaily.cc. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "VMFA Will Return French Painting to Collector's Heirs". Antiques And The Arts Weekly. 8 June 2004. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Reclaimed: Paintings From the Collection of Jacques Goudstikker". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "The Battle Over the Norton Simon Museum's Nazi-Looted Cranach Paintings Isn't Over as Lawyers File for a Rehearing". artnet News. 14 August 2018. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Norton Simon Museum can keep Nazi-looted Cranachs, US court rules". www.theartnewspaper.com. 31 July 2018. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "Tracing the Kann collection". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Plundered art plagues museums all across America | History News Network". historynewsnetwork.org. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR)-Case Summary-Toledo Museum of Art v. Ullin". www.ifar.org. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
- ^ "Museums Respond to Biting Report on Nazi-Looted Art". Observer. 2 July 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
On June 25, the World Jewish Restitution Organization published a report condemning U.S. Museums for using the legal system to dismiss rather than resolve cases where previous owners request restitution for Nazi-era looted art. Two of the museums mentioned in the report provided the Observer with official statements in response to the accusations: the Toledo Museum of Art and the Detroit Institute of Arts.
- ^ "Museums Respond to Biting Report on Nazi-Looted Art". Observer. 2 July 2015. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- ^ WORLD JEWISH RESTITUTION ORGANIZATION. "REPORT CONCERNING CURRENT APPROACHES OF UNITED STATES MUSEUMS TO HOLOCAUST-ERA ART CLAIMS JUNE 25, 2015" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 July 2015.
Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 July 2015. In Detroit Institute, the museum asserted that Michigan's three-year statute of limitations precluded the court or a jury from deciding the merits of the case. According to the museum, the claim was time-barred because it had accrued in 1938, when Ms. Nathan originally sold the paintings to the same European art dealers who purchased the Gaugin "Street Scene in Tahiti" painting at issue in the Toledo Museum case. The court agreed with the museum that the claim had been filed too late and that the discovery rule, under which the clock on the claim would not have begun to tick until the heirs discovered or reasonably should have discovered the basis for their claims to the painting, did not apply. That meant that Ms. Nathan would have had to bring a claim against the museum no later than 1941, when World War II raged across Europe and when Ms. Nathan could not have known that the museum had the painting.
- ^ "Three Grosz Paintings – Grosz Heirs v. Museum of Modern Art — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- ^ Cohen, Patricia (23 August 2011). "Family's Claim Against MoMA Hinges on Dates". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
- ^ "Case Law Corner – Archives 2021". Center for Art Law. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
Plaintiff, the estate of Margaret Kainer, commenced this action in the Supreme Court of New York in January 2013. Plaintiff alleged claims of conversion, unjust enrichment, and conspiracy based on a 2009 sale of an Edgar Degas painting, Danseuses, stolen from Kainer by the Nazis in the 1930s. Plaintiffs asserted that the predecessor of Defendant Norbert Stiftung ("the Foundation") improperly obtained Kainer's assets and that Kainer's extensive art collection passed to them under French intestacy law.
- ^ "NY court says fight over Nazi-stolen Degas doesn't belong here". www.courthousenews.com. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
11 heirs of Kainer brought a suit in New York that claimed the foundation was a sham entity created by the Swiss bank UBS. In a dispute where the parties are spread across the globe, however, the state trial court said it could not be regarded as a convenient venue.
- ^ Beal, Graham. "Handing Back the Monet, Holocaust_Era_Assets_Conference_Proceedings_2009" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 May 2019.
- ^ "SA family fights Liz Taylor for painting". lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
- ^ Neuendorf, Henri (21 March 2018). "A Prize Van Gogh Elizabeth Taylor Was Given by Her Art-Dealer Father Is Now Heading to Christie's". Artnet News. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
- ^ "Rightful owners emerge for exhibited Nazi war loot in the Centre Pompidou". www.theartnewspaper.com. 30 April 1997. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ ""L'Homme à la guitare" de Braque restera au Centre Pompidou". Le Monde.fr (in French). 26 November 2005. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Noce, Vincent. "Spoliation : le président de Beaubourg chez le juge". Libération (in French). Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ "Paris museum accused of buying looted masterpiece". The Guardian. 16 March 1999. Archived from the original on 23 August 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
- ^ Cohen, Patricia; Mashberg, Tom (26 April 2013). "Family, 'Not Willing to Forget,' Pursues Art It Lost to Nazis (Published 2013)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Strasbourg settles with Bernhard Altmann heirs over Nazi-looted Canaletto". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ La Vue de l’église de la Salute depuis l’entrée du Grand Canal par Canaletto restera à Strasbourg Archived 16 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine, 26 November 2010
- ^ a b c d e Ben-David, Daniel. "The miraculous story of the Chagall that was lost and found and lost again". www.thejc.com. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ a b c "Marc Chagall, " Le Père "". Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme (in French). 25 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ "French National Assembly approves return of 15 Nazi-looted works—including paintings by Chagall and Klimt—to Jewish heirs". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 27 January 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
- ^ Republique Française (21 February 2022). ""LOI n° 2022-218 du 21 février 2022 relative à la restitution ou la remise de certains biens culturels aux ayants droit de leurs propriétaires victimes de persécutions antisémites" [Law No. 2022-218, February 21, 2022, in regards to the restitution or return of cultural goods to the heirs of victims of anti-Semetic persecution]". Légifrance. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
- ^ "List of restitutions from the Plateforme Ouverte du Patrimoine - Base Rose Valland". www.pop.culture.gouv.fr. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
- ^ chungcecile (16 March 2016). "Les œuvres provenant de la spoliation nazie récupérées par les musées nationaux – L'affaire Alphonse Kann contre Beaubourg". SPOLIATION NAZIE (in French). Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "The Alphonse and Hélène Kann collection: two generations, one war and hundreds of art works". Barnebys.com. 13 February 2017. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ Noce, Vincent. "Biens spoliés: un galeriste sur la selletteLe non-lieu, dont a bénéficié l'acheteur d'une toile volée par les nazis, a été invalidé. (Frans Hals)". Libération (in French). Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ GAUTHIER, Nicole. "Strasbourg tient à "son Klimt"". Libération (in French). Retrieved 20 March 2021.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 351 et suivantes.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, S. 343 ff.
- ^ "Une œuvre de Klimt spoliée par les nazis restituée à ses propriétaires". lootedart.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 398 et suivantes.
- ^ "REDISCOVERED MASTERPIECE" (PDF). Christies.
the Grünwald collection, including Wilted Sunflowers (Autumn Sun II), was confiscated in Strasbourg, where it had been placed in storage by Grünwald and sold at auction in 1942. Karl Grünwald escaped the war, but spent most of his life searching relentlessly for his collection. He only had limited success until he passed away in November 1964, when his family continued this pursuit. Karl Grünwald had four children, Hannah, Frederic, Lena and François Grünwald. Tragically Karl's wife Steffany and their daughter Lena died in a concentration camp.
- ^ Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 496
- ^ "Family reunited with Schiele masterpiece stolen 60 years ago by Nazis". The Independent. 20 October 2011. Archived from the original on 18 September 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
- ^ Art Cult: Italian Paintings in the Louvre Museum claimed back 26 November 2010; Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow : Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch. Kunstrestitution weltweit, page 350 et suivantes.
- ^ "Spoliation nazie : 7 œuvres d'art volées à Paris sous l'Occupation restituées aux ayants droit". Connaissance des Arts (in French). 2 December 2020. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Restitution de 7 œuvres d'art spoliées faisant partie des œuvres dites Musées nationaux Récupération (MNR) aux ayants droit de Marguerite Stern". Ministère de la Culture. 12 January 2020.
- ^ "Trois tableaux d'André Derain restitués à une famille juive spoliée". La Croix (in French). 30 September 2020. ISSN 0242-6056. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
- ^ Michel Deléan (1 July 2020). "Les œuvres spoliées pendant la guerre retourneront bien aux héritiers légitimes". Mediapart.
- ^ AFP. "France confirms restitution of Pissarro looted from Jewish collector in WWII". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ a b "Payout for painting sold to escape Nazis". Independent.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 January 2001.
- ^ "Heirs of Baron Herzog continue battle for Nazi-looted art collection despite US Supreme Court dismissal". www.theartnewspaper.com. 7 February 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ "de Csepel v. Republic of Hungary". harvardlawreview.org. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
- ^ Gibbons, Erin. "The Hunt Controversy: A Shadow Report" (PDF). Centre Simon Wiesenthal. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 November 2013.
- ^ "Sotheby's to auction a masterpiece by Camille Pissarro". www.theartwolf.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
Max Silberberg, a Jewish industrialist based in Breslau, who assembled one of the finest pre-war collections of 19th and 20th Century art in Germany. Forced by the Nazis to sell his entire collection, he later died in the Holocaust.
- ^ "After Circuitous Journey, Painting Lost to Nazis Finds a Home in Isra…". archive.is. 17 March 2021. Archived from the original on 17 March 2021. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ Lawless, Jill. "Restituted Pissarro painting sells for $32m in London". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "A Renaissance Painting Seized by the Nazis Is Rediscovered | Barnebys Magazine". Barnebys.com. 26 August 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
when Arens passed away, the painting was inherited by his eldest daughter Ann and her husband Friedrich Unger. And from here begins the mystery. Two years later, the entire collection of the Arens family was seized by the Nazi authorities and then returned under the payment of a ransom.
- ^ "Turin museum pays settlement to Jewish heirs for Renaissance Madonna that was looted by Nazis". www.lootedart.com. The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Nazi-looted 474-year-old painting returns to heirs". m.bbc.co.uk. 19 April 2012.
- ^ Gyr, Marcel (31 October 2012). "Bührle-Stiftung mit neuer Forderung konfrontiert". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in Swiss High German). ISSN 0376-6829. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ Hickley, Catherine (11 October 2021). "A Nazi Legacy Haunts a Museum's New Galleries". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
According to Gloor, the foundation faces no "substantive" outstanding restitution claims. But Juan Carlos Emden would beg to differ. He has been trying for almost a decade to recover Monet's Poppy Field Near Vétheuil (around 1879), which once belonged to his grandfather, Max Emden, a Jewish department-store owner who lost much of his wealth as a result of Nazi persecution.
- ^ "Un Monet met la Fondation Bührle sous pression - Le Temps" (in French). 1 November 2012. ISSN 1423-3967. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ "An arms dealer casts a shadow over Kunsthaus Zurich". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 27 January 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ "Berne finit de régler le legs de Cornelius Gurlitt". Bilan (in French). 11 December 2021. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ "Swiss museum to part with 29 works from Gurlitt trove suspected of being Nazi loot". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 17 December 2021. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ "38 - Les œuvres du legs Gurlitt auxquelles renonce le musée de Berne". Le Quotidien de l'Art (in French). 12 December 2021. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ "Cultural Plunder by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR): Database of Art Objects at the Jeu de Paume". www.errproject.org. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ "Nazi art: righting the wrongs. - Free Online Library". www.thefreelibrary.com. Archived from the original on 14 January 2022. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ "St. Gallens verschämter "Hodler"". NZZ.
Simon Frick wollte nie auf das Ansinnen der Erbin Gerta Silberberg eintreten, vermögensrechtliche Fragen zu klären. Heute stehen sich die Frick-Stiftung und der Gerta Silberberg Discretionary Trust, vertreten durch das Berliner Anwaltsbüro «von Trott zu Solz Lammek», gegenüber.
- ^ "Masterpiece to Stay in St. Gallen: An Agreement is Reached on Ferdinand Hodler's "Thunersee mit Stockhornkette"". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
Ferdinand Hodler's famous painting "Thunersee mit Stockhornkette" (Lake Thun with Stockhorn Chain) (around 1913) will remain on public display at Kunstmuseum St. Gallen thanks to a long-anticipated agreement with the Simon und Charlotte Frick Foundation. Frick, the former State Councillor of St. Gallen, and his wife acquired the painting at auction at Galerie Kornfeld in Bern in 1985. At the time, the auction catalog erroneously documented a flawless Swiss provenance. Later, contrary to these claims, it was revealed that a previous owner of the painting had been the German Jewish collector Max Silberberg who, along with his wife Johanna, was murdered by the Nazis in 1942.
- ^ "La Chaux-de-Fonds restitue une œuvre spoliée par le régime de Vichy". Le Temps (in French). 12 March 2018. ISSN 1423-3967. Archived from the original on 12 March 2018. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ "'I've Regained a Part of My Family': Unusual Swiss Restitution Case Brings John Constable Painting Home to Heirs in France". www.lootedart.com. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
On March 12, after a grueling decade-plus struggle from his home base outside Paris, Alain Monteagle recovered a painting by John Constable, Dedham from Langham (1813), that had been stolen in 1942 from his grandfather's aunt. "I've regained a part of my family," Monteagle said at an emotional ceremony at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland.
- ^ "International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR)-Case Summary-Lissitzky v. Beyeler Foundation". www.ifar.org. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ "Son of El Lissitzky files for return of another war loot Kandinsky". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 31 August 2001. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ swissinfo.ch, Michèle Laird, Traduction de l'anglais: Frédéric Burnand (7 November 2013). "Les musées suisses face au pillage nazi". SWI swissinfo.ch (in French). Archived from the original on 5 August 2015. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
Autre cas avec un tableau de Max Lieberman vendu par le collectionneur d'art Max Silberberg en 1934. Il a été établi que la vente a eu lieu sous la contrainte des nazis. Le Musée d'art de Coire, qui avait reçu en donation la peinture en 1992, a décidé en 2000 de la retourner à l'héritier de Max Silberberg.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Certic, Miodrag Certic,Mia (17 May 2015). "A Swiss Merchant of Death's Nazi Friends and Suspicious Masterpieces". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Kunsthaus-Eröffnung: Jüdische Vorbesitzer von Bührles Bildern - Künste im Gespräch - SRF". Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (SRF) (in German). Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ Knöfel, Ulrike (17 September 2021). "Emil Bührle und seine Kunstsammlung: Das Erbe des Kanonenkönigs (S+)". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ "Masterpieces marred by dubious past". nationthailand. 26 August 2015. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ Knöfel, Ulrike (9 April 2009). "A Question of Morality: An End to Restitution of Nazi Looted Art?". Der Spiegel. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
- ^ "Oliver Meier, Michael Feller, Stefanie Christ: Der Gurlitt-Komplex. Bern und die Raubkunst, Chronos 2017 :: Portal Kunstgeschichte – Das Informationsportal für Kunsthistoriker im deutschsprachigen Raum". www.portalkunstgeschichte.de. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ a b Siegal, Nina (12 January 2020). "Poland Urged to Look for Nazi-Looted Art Still Held in Its Museums (Published 2020)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
- ^ a b Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy (February 2020). "A Goudstikker van Goyen in Gdańsk: A Case Study of Nazi-Looted Art in Poland". International Journal of Cultural Property. 27 (1): 53–96. doi:10.1017/S0940739120000016. ISSN 0940-7391. S2CID 226132418.
- ^ a b "Painting lost in Holocaust to be auctioned in London under Polish-brokered deal". lootedart.com. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
Annexes
editSee also
edit- Nazi plunder
- Aryanization
- The Holocaust
- Führermuseum
- Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce
- Bruno Lohse
- Hans Wendland
- Vugesta
- The Holocaust in Austria
- The Holocaust in France
- Max Silberberg
- Friedrich Gutmann
- Musées nationaux récupération
Bibliography
edit- Nazi looting : the plunder of Dutch Jewry during the Second World War, Gerard Aalders Oxford ; New York : Berg, ©2004.[1]
- Robbing the Jews : the confiscation of Jewish property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945, Martin Dean, Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, dr. 2011.[2]
- Le marche de l'art sous l'Occupation : 1940–1944, Emmanuelle Polack; Laurence Bertrand Dorleac, Paris : Tallandier, 2020[3]
- Göring's man in Paris : the story of a Nazi art plunderer and his world, Jonathan Petropoulos, New Haven : Yale University Press, [2021][4]
- (de)Thomas Armbruster, Rückerstattung der Nazi-Beute, die Suche, Bergung und Restitution von Kulturgütern durch die westlichen Alliierten nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, Zurich, de Gruyter, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-89949-542-3, (Schriften zum Kulturgüterschutz), (et aussi Zurich, université, Dissertation, 2007)
- (de)Ulf Häder, Beiträge öffentlicher Einrichtungen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland zum Umgang mit Kulturgütern aus ehemaligem jüdischen Besitz. Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste, Magdebourg 2001, ISBN 3-00-008868-7, (Veröffentlichungen der Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste 1).
- (de)Jonathan Petropoulos, Kunstraub und Sammelwahn. Kunst und Politik im Dritten Reich. Propyläen, Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-549-05594-3.
- (de)Alexandra Reininghaus, Recollecting. Raub und Restitution. Passagen-Verlag, Vienne 2008, ISBN 978-3-85165-887-3.
- (de)Gunnar Schnabel, Monika Tatzkow, Nazi Looted Art. Handbuch Kunstrestitution weltweit. Proprietas-Verlag, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-019368-2.
- Schuhmacher, Jacques, Nazi-Era Provenance of Museum Collections: A research guide. UCL Press, London 2024, ISBN 9781800086906.
External links
edit- (en) Lost Art Register, Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste Magdebourg Archived 27 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- (en) Art Law Group, Herrick, Feinstein LLP: Resolved Stolen Art Claims
- Austria Restitution Reports
- Restitutionen Archiv Kunstverwaltung des Bundes
- ^ Aalders, Gerard (2004). Nazi looting: the plunder of Dutch Jewry during the Second World War. Oxford; New York: Berg. ISBN 978-1-85973-722-4. OCLC 53223516.
- ^ Dean, Martin (2011). Robbing the Jews: the confiscation of Jewish property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88825-7. OCLC 812775661.
- ^ Polack, Emmanuelle; Bertrand Dorleac, Laurence (2019). Le marche de l'art sous l'Occupation: 1940-1944 (in French). Tallandier. ISBN 979-10-210-2089-4. OCLC 1249856969.
- ^ Petropoulos, Jonathan (2021). Göring's man in Paris: the story of a Nazi art plunderer and his world. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-25192-0. OCLC 1236148051.