Artwork looted by Nazis 80 years ago spotted in estate agent ad

Robles Casas & CamposAn Italian master picture stolen from a Jewish art seller in Amsterdam by the Nazis was found on a real estate agent website that sells a house in Argentina 80 years after being taken.
A photo shows the portrait of Giuseppe Ghislandi once a portrait of a Lady hanging on a sofa near Buenos Aires, once a senior Nazi official who once moved to South America after the Second World War.
Picture, What features in the database of lost warDutch newspaper advertising reports were watched when the house was offered for sale by the daughter of the house.
The artwork of art is among the hundreds of hundreds of hundreds of art sellers Jacques Goudstikker, who helped other Jews escape during the war.
Goudstikker died in the sea in an accident that fled the Netherlands and was buried in England.
More than 1,100 works from the Goudstikker collection were forced by Senior Nazis on sale after their death, including Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring.
After the war, some works were rescued in Germany and exhibited in Amsterdam’s Rijkmuseum as part of the Netherlands national collection. The advertisement, Goudstikker’s Single-Sorry heir, mother-in-law Marei von Sahar, had 202 pieces in 2006.
But a picture, a portrait of Late Baroque portrait Giuseppe Ghislandi’s Contesa Colleoni, has been missing so far.
AD’s investigation Argentine Argentina, who fled to Switzerland before moving to Brazil in 1945, who claimed that Friedrich Kadgien, who was a SS officer and his senior financial assistance to Göring, had become a successful businessman before he moved to Brazil in 1945.
Kadgien, described as the “lowest species snake” by American interrogations, died in 1979. A US file seen by the name, Kadgien notes “important assets, still valuable for us,” he said.
The article said that after a few years, Nazi had tried to talk about his father and missing artworks with his two daughters in Buenos Aires, but in vain.
However, when one of Kadgien’s daughters offered his father’s house with a real estate agent specialized in expensive Argentine property, journalists had good luck.
Ann There is no reason to think that this could be a copy, dedi Ann Annelies Kool and Perry Schrier examined images from the Dutch Cultural Heritage Agency (RCE).
Another looted art work – a permanent life of the 17th century Dutch painter Abraham Mignon – was also detected in one of the sisters’s social media.
Since the photo was identified, all the initiatives to talk to sisters have failed, one of them told the article: “I don’t know which information you want from me and I don’t know which picture you are talking about.”
Goudstikker’s lawyers of the property, said they would make every effort to get back the picture.
“My family aims to bring back every work of art and restore her heritage,” Von Sahar said. He said.




