Dec 29, 2017

Dorotheum Sales from 1938-1945

Dorotheum: Purchases In Netherlands And Belgium. NARA https://www.fold3.com/image/269977839

Dorotheumsankäufe 1938 - 1945

(see site archive and lootedart for downloadable PDF)

Inv. Nr. Objekt
59.297 Gemälde, unbekannter Maler, Porträt Johann III. Sobieski, Öl/Lwd.,
Rahmen 115 x 94 cm

59.766 Zusammenlegspiel „Quodlibet“, Biedermeier, unter Glas, in Originalkarton
39,5 x 49,3 cm

60.181 Gemälde, Hans Canon, Die Fischverkäuferin, 1860, sign. u. dat., Öl/Lwd.,
Rahmen 158 x 126 cm

60.183 Porzellanschüssel, oval, Gitterrand bemalt mit roter Rocailleverzierung,
im Spiegel bunter Streublumendekor, Blaumarke, Mitte 18. Jh.

60.185 Porzellan, Schale mit Untertasse, überhöhter Schlangenhenkel, Darstellung
vorne: Danae und der Goldregen, sonst Goldplättchendekor auf weißem
Grund, Tasse innen vergoldet, Wien, Blaumarke, Jahresstempel 1815,
Höhe 9,8 cm

60.186 Porzellangruppe, bemalt, Kavalier auf Schlittschuhen reicht einer neben
ihm sitzenden Dame einen Schlittschuh, Wien, Blaumarke, Mitte 18. Jh.,
Höhe 12,5 cm

Dec 27, 2017

Art Dealers and Art Historians: Authorities Identifiers by the Numbers

Linked Open Data queries need authoritative identifiers to work across platforms.


QUESTION: 
Which are the most used identifiers for art dealers, art historians, art dealers and art collectors who exist in Wikidata?

Below are Wikidata Sparql Queries that show the authorities that are most used for referencing art dealers and art historians in Wikidata.

(VIAF wins hands down.) 


ART DEALERS : VIAF, LCCN, RKD...




ART HISTORIANS





ART COLLECTORS











Wikidata Query for Most Used Identifiers for Art Dealers

SELECT ?propertyLabel ?propertyDescription ?count WHERE {
{
SELECT ?propertyclaim (COUNT(*) AS ?count) WHERE {
?item wdt:P106 wd:Q173950.
?item wdt:P31 wd:Q5.
?item ?propertyclaim _:b2.
}
GROUP BY ?propertyclaim
}
?property wikibase:propertyType wikibase:ExternalId.
?property wdt:P31 wd:Q19595382.
?property wikibase:claim ?propertyclaim.
SERVICE wikibase:label { bd:serviceParam wikibase:language "en". }
}
ORDER BY DESC(?count)
LIMIT 100

Nov 20, 2017

OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit Reports 1945-1946: Guide to Online PDFs and Searchable Texts - Part 1

OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit: Where (Online) to Find All of the Reports Published from 1945-1946

This is the first part in a multi-part survey of available online resources for consulting and searching the Art Looting Investigation Unit Reports in English.
(Unfortunately, we were not able to locate translations in French, German, Spanish, Italian or Russian. If you know of a resource that has translated the ALIU Reports and Red Flag Name list into languages other than English, please add in the comments.)

Status August 2017: The ALIU reports are held by NARA. Online researchers can find pieces of the ALIU Reports on a variety of sites - LootedArt.com, NARA, Fold3, Loyola, EHRI and dfs.ny.gov, but, at present, there does not seem to be one place where ALL of the contents can be downloaded and viewed both in photographs of the original report and in searchable and machine-readable text.

Nov 18, 2017

Art Museums in Germany, map from Wikidata




This map of art museums in Germany is generated by a Wikidata Query.
You can click on any dot to see the information about the museum.


Nov 8, 2017

Art Looting Investigation Unit: mentions of the Bauer Collection in the Final Report

What do the Art Looting Investigation Reports say about the looting of the Bauer Collection? How easy - or difficult - is it to access this information today, in 2017?

Can one search the archives via internet and retrieve the information?

Here is the result of a simple test: looking for information on the seizure of the Bauer collection in one of the ALIU Reports, the "Final Report". This report contains, notably, a list of names of suspected Nazi era operators.

Aug 2, 2017

WWII Era Provenance Research Projects PDF files



The following American museums have published WWII Era provenance information for selected artworks online in PDF files.


Philadelphia Museum of Art List of Collection Works That Changed Ownership In Continental Europe, 1933-1945 - no images (Archived version here)


Tacoma Art Museum (PDF published on the internet  in 2015: Archived version here)


Toledo Museum (PDF dated 2006: Archived version here)

Detroit Institute of Arts Provenance Listings (Archived Version here

https://web.archive.org/web/20100329015920/https://www.dia.org/art/provenance-listings.aspx)


The Guggenheim Museum collection : paintings, 1880-1945
by Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; Rudenstine, Angelica Zander; Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation  Publication date 1976 (Isbn 0892070021,Lccn 75037356,Oclc-id 185583502,Openlibrary_edition OL11297020M, Openlibrary_work OL8482129W


Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution (PDF dated 9/10/2013 published on internet: Archived version here) This link appears to have been taken down since its publication.


To search in files, clink on link and hit Ctrl-F to call up the search box.

Jul 23, 2017

Archives and Wikipedia: can structured links help make resources easier to find?

Germany provides much interesting thinking on linking information. Below, Odendahl, posting on Open Edition, shares a suggestion for referencing archives on Wikipedia in an article entitled "Archivquellen einheitlich in der Wikipedia verlinken".  (click here for Google Translate).

We'd like, he says, to see our archives used.

Why not have an easy and yet rigorously formatted way to share archives?

The format that he suggests using in Wikipedia is:

{{Archivquelle
|sammlung=
|bestand=
|dossier=
|dokument=
|signatur=
|titel=
|datum=
|institution=
|link=
}}

It seems like this (or something like this) could be a very useful addition. 

Take, for example the International Research Portal for Records Related to Nazi-Era Cultural Property that is hosted by the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI).  

Wouldn't it be nice to have a Wikipedia (and this Wikidata and Dbpedia) for each archive referenced, along with direct links to the database on Wikipedia? It might make it easier for people who don't know about EHRI or the Portal to find the information, and there doesn't seem to be any downside.

(As of this writing the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure had a Wikidata ID but not yet a Wikipedia page.)

What do you think?

Jul 12, 2017

Looted art databases: Adolf Weinmüller

Sale records from Nazi-era auction house Adolf Weinmüller, which trafficked in art looted from Jewish owners, are available online at Germany’s Lost Art Database.
A member of the Nazi Party since 1931, Weinmüller absorbed two Jewish-run auction houses: Munich’s Hugo Helbing, and Vienna’s Samuel Kende. Weinmüller's clients included Martin Bormann, Adolf Hitler’s private secretary.
In 1958, Weinmüller sold his business to Rudolf Neumeister. In 2013 a Neumeister employee discovered the catalogues, which it lent to the Zentral Institut für Kunstgeschichte (the central institute for art history) for publication on the Lost Art website.
Sarah Cascone, writing for Artnews on May 29, 2014, pointed out that "Given the large number of records, it seems plausible that the Weinmüller catalogues could lead investigators and Sunday provenance sleuths to the next Gurlitt looted art trove."
"Some 34,500 objects were sold by Weinmüller during this period in 33 Munich auctions and 18 Vienna sales."
Article from Artnews by Sarah Cascone, "Now You Can Browse Nazi Auction Catalogues for Looted Art Sales" published May 29, 2014


Jun 6, 2017

Publishing open linked data: Tableminer and Austrian data portals

In this interesting paper, Tomas Knap looks at using Tableminer+ to help transform CSV files from Austrian data portals,  http://www.data.gv.at and http://www.opendataportal.at, into Linked Open Data.

Quote
"To leverage CSV files to Linked Data3 , it is necessary to 1) classify CSV columns based on its content and context against existing knowledge bases 2) assign RDF terms (HTTP URLs, blank nodes and literals) to the particular cell values according to Linked Data principles (HTTP URL identifiers may be reused from one of the existing knowledge bases), 3) discover relations between columns based on the evidence for the relations in the existing knowledge bases, and 4) convert CSV data to RDF data properly using data types, language tags, well-known Linked Data vocabularies, etc" - 
from: "Increasing Quality of Austrian Open Data by Linking them to Linked Data Sources: Lessons Learned?" by Tomas Knap, Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics,  Czech Republic, Semantic Web Company, Vienna, Austria
Read more: at http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1585/ldq2016_paper_01.pdf

Jun 1, 2017

Database as Book: Le Catalogue Goering

Auteurs: Les Archives Diplomatiques et Jean-Marc Dreyfus
Préface: Laurent Fabius
Editeur: Flammarion
Langue: Français
ISBN: 978-2081365407
https://www.amazon.fr/catalogue-Goering-Jean-Marc-Dreyfus/dp/2081365405

« Un accès inédit aux archives de la spoliation » : LeCatalogue Goering (30 septembre 2015) - France.Gov

Goering Collection Online Search (in German)
Quick Search in Goering Collection




************

Le Catalogue Goering

Date: 2015-30-09
by
Jean-Marc Dreyfus
**************************

May 21, 2017

Preserving Digital Objects

How to ensure preservation and access for digital objects? 

The California Digital Library has published guidelines that aim to support the following objectives:

• Ensure a basic level of uniformity in the structure and encoding of non-licensed digital content managed by the CDL
• Advance interoperability among digital content from diverse institutions
• Promote efficient ingest procedures
• Support the orderly management of digital content
• Facilitate access to digital content by users
• Minimize costs 
To consult the PDF of  CDL Guidelines for Digital Objects (CDL GDO) Maintained by the California Digital Library (January 2017 University of California, California Digital Library)

For more information on Calisphere/DAMS Projects

May 17, 2017

Karl Haberstock. Using Amazon Kindle's "Search Everything" function

Karl Haberstock. Using Amazon Kindle's "Search Everything" function to quantify, locate, and analyze mentions in ebooks.

Any ebook  or doc file on Kindle is searchable. Amazon's ebook device indexes books and (most) documents and provides fast searches through all content.

One quick search on Kindle shows that Haberstock's name appears:



If the ebook is loaded on Kindle, the results are immediate. And not limited to books. Kindle also searches through documents.
Immediately, with no coding, preparation or Uniform Resources Identifiers (URIs).
A click on any one of the books displayed will immediately take the user to a list of every text in which the word is mentioned, in context, and available for highlighting in Notes.

While awaiting for the promise of Linked Open Data to be fulfilled, Kindle can provide a simple tool to unify information. The only requirement: to download the ebook to the Kindle device.

Dbpedia, in German: http://de.dbpedia.org/page/Karl_Haberstock
Wikidata (Library of CongressVIAFISNIGNDBFN
http://wikidata.org/entity/Q1731388

Holocaust - Nazi Plunder - Art Dealer


Apr 23, 2017

DATABASE: Download the Entartete Kunst inventory


"The V&A holds the only known copy of a complete inventory of 'Entartete Kunst' confiscated by the Nazi regime from public institutions in Germany, mostly during 1937 and 1938. The list of more than 16,000 artworks was produced by the Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda (Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda) in 1942 or thereabouts. It seems that the inventory was compiled as a final record, after the sales and disposals of the confiscated art had been completed in the summer of 1941. The inventory’s two typescript volumes provide crucial information about the provenance, exhibition history and fate of each artwork.

Download the Entartete Kunst inventory
(It's presented in two separate files:)

http://www.vam.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/240167/Entartete_Kunst_Vol1.pdf

http://www.vam.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/240168/Entartete_Kunst_Vol2.pdf

View a few pages from the Degenerate Art Inventory



***

see also:

Hermann Göring
http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/page/Q47906


Apr 22, 2017

Poland's Holocaust Claims Deadline: WJRO publishes Warsaw database

WJRO Warsaw Database

Background: The Polish government voted to terminate open Holocaust-related claims for property unless owners or family members came forward to reactivate the claims. However, the database published by Poland omitted the NAMES of the claimants, thus making search extremely difficult as the families of Holocaust victims might not know the exact address of the property.
To help families find open claims that need to be reactivated, the WJRO has published a database of names and addresses for Warsaw. The presence of a name does not mean that there is a claim.

For more information about the WJRO Warsaw database, please see:

Apr 21, 2017

Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art Provenance Information AccessTest

How accessible is provenance information on museum websites?

In this Video ArtDataTests looks at NEPIP and FRED JONES JR MUSEUM OF ART to see whether the provenance for items listed on the Nazi-Era Provenance Internet Portal for the Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art is accessible.


Test script
1. Go to the Nazi-Era Provenance Internet Portal (NEPIP), search for Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art
2. Test link to museum (ERROR)
3. View artworks listed in NEPIP for the Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art
4. Scroll through the list to find an artwork with an artist other than "Anonymous", click on Maurice de Vlaminck 
5. Click on "more information" to view Accession Number
6. Copy Accession Number
7. Go to Google, enter Search Collections Fred Jones
8. Click on Fred Jones Jr Museum of Art site
9. Look for Collections Search
10. In the absence of a Collections Search function, click on European Art and scroll down list until Vlaminck found (note that the title displayed is not the same as in NEPIP)
11. Click on painting and view item record to verify whether the provenance is visible (It is not. Neither is the accession number)
12. Click on next Vlaminck
Video: https://youtu.be/K1xRjv707E4

Test Result: No search on provenance information. No display of provenance information. 

Apr 15, 2017

Belgium to publish all looted works of art in its public collections on a central website?

March 2017: Lootedart.com published the news that the Flemish Culture Minister agrees on the "desirability of Belgium publishing all looted works of art in its public collections on a central website". No date has been set yet. 

In February journalist Geert Sels revealed in De Standaard that 78 looted works of art returned to Belgium after the war remain unpublished. 

This led to questions in parliament. Below is the exchange in parliament translated from the Dutch by Google Translate (see original questions here)

https://www.vlaamsparlement.be/commissies/commissievergaderingen/1121478/verslag/1123854

Jean-Jacques De Gucht (Open VLD)
The Netherlands pursuant database Origins Unknown 1621 paintings before which the country does not know to whom they belong because the owners are deceased, have fled or did not report. There are also works that were shipped after the war by mistake from Germany to the Netherlands.

Many art collectors in the Netherlands and Belgium were forced to offer their property for sale to middlemen acting on behalf of individuals within the Nazi regime. It also happened that the Nazis stole the work directly or confiscated from prisoners or the persecution of the Jews.

Netherlands has set up an independent advisory committee which includes advises the Minister on claims to objects in the national collection and works of art owned by the state at the local level, the provincial level and so on.

Our country pursued this matter earlier research. I refer to the Commission for the compensation of the members of the Jewish Community of Belgium, which has terminated the investigation and handling of the applications for compensation on December 31, 2007. The secretariat of the commission also put stop work. The succession is assured from January 1, 2008 by the services of the Chancellery of the Prime Minister and today under the Federal Science Policy.

Today I learn from the press that many of the 78 paintings who returned after the war from Nazi Germany and are in our museums have no conclusive provenance. Unlike our neighboring countries such as the Netherlands, Belgium, the documents were taken into custody, never made public.

Minister, what is your reaction to the recent revelations which indicate that we are a significant number of the 78 paintings who returned after the war have no clear origin?

Are there cultural moment in museums, cultural institutions and public buildings of the Flemish Community who returned after World War II to our country but in fact have their origins in other countries? Can you possibly explain?

Are you willing to go to the Dutch example and as I have already argued, to set up a website where all suspicious pieces are clearly displayed? If not, why not, since there are clearly problems with the origin of several pieces? If yes, please explain in detail regarding the timing and content?

Chairman
Gatz minister has the floor.

Minister Sven Gatz
Mr De Gucht, I have read with interest the article Art das Reich. I liked it, probably like many of you, interesting reading, which to reflect on.

I welcome this question, outlining the larger framework. Thanks to the many and hard work of the Study of Jewish property and compensation committee of the Belgian government to compensate the Jewish community in Belgium and abroad during the 90 losses for the major financial she suffered during the occupation in Belgium .

With the payment of the final compensation in the course of the work of the committees were established and the transfer of the latest resources from the compensation to the Jewish community in Belgium, in 2008 came an end to the responsiveness and handling claims of Jewish victims of World War II. When the compensation paid slew partly on shortly after the end of World War II from Germany to Belgium returned art.

Most of these works were then auctioned publicly, some were entrusted to Belgian museums. From the museums entrusted artworks came pretty much from the collections of antique dealers who more or less had made common cause with the Germans and German art sold at public or semi-public collectors.

In Public Kunstbezit Flanders (OKV) is done including the story of the unsuccessful attempts of these dealers to get reimbursed by them when selling art on the grounds that they were forced to sell.

Belgium, however, endorsed in 1998. The Washington Principles on Nazi-confiscated Art. It is eleven non-binding principles, summarized, tantamount to states, to the extent possible and within their own legal system, should take initiatives to facilitate the restitution of stolen works of art by the Nazis. Sell ​​under duress is then treated in the same furnace.


In Belgium, use the public authorities as a principle that if it can be shown that the artwork was stolen by the Nazis and was acquired forcibly through a sale to be returned to work or that alternatively pay a compensation to the descendants of the Benade... (for more, please consult the original Dutch article)


Apr 7, 2017

Provenance at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

The Philadelphia Museum of Art Provides the Following List of Collection Works That Changed Ownership In Continental Europe, 1933-1945 in PDF format


See also: Online Records with Provenance  and the Nazi Era Provenance Internet Portal for the Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Philadelphia Museum of Art List of Collection Works That Changed Ownership In Continental Europe, 1933-1945

The information on these pages represents our current state of knowledge and will be updated as research progresses. We welcome any additional information that would help complete or clarify the provenance of these works, at provenance@philamuseum.org.

Jean (Hans) Arp, French (born Germany), 1886 - 1966 Vase—Bust 1930 Wood 12 1/4 x 9 3/4 x 2 3/8 inches (31.1 x 24.8 x 6 cm) A. E. Gallatin Collection, 1947 Provenance A. E. Gallatin, New York, purchased from the artist, summer 1933 [1]; gift to PMA, 1947. 1. See Gail Stavitsky, The Development, Institutionalization, and Impact of the A. E. Gallatin Collection of Modern Art [Ph. D. diss., New York University], 1990, v. 1, p. 248, and v. 6, p. 4. The acquisition was announced in a Gallery of Living Art press release, December 9, 1933.

Jean (Hans) Arp, French (born Germany), 1886 - 1966 Constellation 1932 Wood 27 1/2 x 33 3/8 x 1 1/2 inches (69.9 x 84.8 x 3.8 cm) The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, 1950 1950-134-2 Provenance Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968), Paris; sold to Louise and Walter C. Arensberg, Los Angeles, 1937 [1]; gift to PMA, 1950. 1. See letter from Duchamp to Arensbergs, September 8, 1951 (PMA Arensberg Archives, CA Use Tax file), stating that he sold them the work from his private collection. A series of letters from Galka Scheyer in Hollywood to Hans Arp in 1933-1934 discuss a relief referred to only as "Configuration in White" or "das weisse Relief" purchased by the Arensbergs through Scheyer. Since "Constellation" is the only work by Arp in the Arensberg collection as bequeathed to the PMA in 1950, either the Arensbergs acquired a different work of his and subsequently sold or traded it, or Duchamp was mistaken and "Constellation" was purchased through Scheyer in 1933.

Georges Braque, French, 1882 - 1963 The Cup 1917-18 Oil and graphite on cardboard Sheet: 25 x 18 7/8 inches (63.5 x 47.9 cm) The A. E. Gallatin Collection, 1952 1952-61-6 Provenance A. E. Gallatin, New York, 1936, probably acquired directly from the artist [1]; bequest to PMA, 1952. 1. See Braque's dedication on the front of the painting "à M. Gallatin/ G. Braque/ 1918", and also Gallatin's Museum of Living Art press release of October 27, 1936 stating that the new acquisition came from Braque's studio: the artist "for many years refused to part with it. It hung always over the door of his studio in Paris, and not until this year could he be persuaded to allow it to pass into an American museum."

Georges Braque, French, 1882 - 1963 Figure 1920 Plaster 8 1/4 x 3 1/2 x 3 1/2 inches (21 x 8.9 x 8.9 cm) The A. E. Gallatin Collection, 1952 1952-61-10 Provenance With Galerie Simon, Paris; sold to A. E. Gallatin, 1933 [1]; bequest to PMA, 1952. 1. As per letter of September 18, 1987, from Maurice Jardot, Galerie Louise Leiris, to Gail Stavitsky; see Stavitsky, The Development, Institutionalization, and Impact of the A. E. Gallatin Collection of Modern Art [Ph.D. dissertation, New York University], 1990, v. 6, p. 38.

Georges Braque, French, 1882 - 1963 A Teapot and a Plate of Cheese 1942 Oil on canvas 13 5/16 x 21 13/16 inches (33.8 x 55.4 cm) The Louis E. Stern Collection, 1963 1963-181-4 Provenance Private collection, Lyon, France (?), or from the artist? [1]; Mr. Poyet [probably Galerie Alfred Poyet], Paris [2]; with Sam Salz, New York, by 1952; sold to Louis E. Stern, New York, March 17, 1952 [3]; bequest to PMA, 1963. 1. The provenance provided by Salz to Stern cites the exhibition "De l'impressionisme à nos jours", Lyon, 1942. This painting was almost certainly no. 4, "Nature morte: L'heure du thÈ". Although it is not illustrated, the dimensions and placement of the signature and date match the PMA painting; moreover the Maeght catalogue does not list any other paintings matching this description other than the PMA work. The exhibition catalogue states that all of the paintings included belonged to Lyonnais collectors. 2. The provenance provided by Salz to Stern simply states "From the artist"; however, the Maeght catalogue, Paris, 1960, no. 24, states that the painting was formerly in the collection of M[onsieur] Poyet, Paris, probably to be identified as Galerie Alfred Poyet, which dealt in modernist works in the 1940's. The Louis E. Stern Collection catalogue, PMA, 1964, no. 14, p. 180, gives the provenance as "the artist; M. Poyet, Paris; Sam Salz, New York." None mention a Lyon owner. Maurice Covo, president of Renou & Poyet, Paris, states in a letter of 27 February 2003 (curatorial file) that although his firm has been unable to locate this painting in their records, Mr. Poyet's relationship with Braque was well known, and he had occasion to buy directly from the artist. 3. Copy of dated receipt from Salz to Stern in curatorial file.

Jan 11, 2017

Nazi looted art in Dutch museums

What is the painting’s provenance?

In 2009  the Dutch Museum Association began an investigation into artworks that had been stolen, confiscated or sold under duress during the Nazi era between 1933 and the end of the Second World War.  (***More recent link to investigation***)

163 museums out of 400 took part. (SEE MUSEUMS)  (***More recent link to MUSEUMS***)

http://www.museumacquisitions.nl/en/10/home/
http://www.museumacquisitions.nl/en/10/home/


A report on the progress of research into Nazi looted art and duress sales was written by Prof. dr. Rudi E.O. Ekkart and drs. Helen C.M. Schretlen (Publication: Museumvereniging, 2014) and is available here:


 The results of the research conducted by each museum have been posted on the website http://www.museumacquisitions.nl,

SEARCH ITEMS HERE   

https://www.musealeverwervingen.nl/en/46/objects/


The following items were identified in the Dutch Museum Report as having potentially problematic provenances.
 (source : https://www.museumvereniging.nl/Portals/0/6-Publicaties/Bestanden/MV_Herkomstonderzoek_DEF.pdf

Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed, Amersfoort
– C.M. Dijkman, Mill
– J.D. Scherft, View of a Church in a Village
– A. Huissem, Landscape
– F.H. Mondriaan, Woodland Path in Haagse Bos
– Anonymous, Portrait Nicolaas Rockox
– Anonymous, Portrait of Adriana Perez