In addition to art dealers and collector, several commercial art galleries, auction houses and museums are registered as Art Looting Red Flag Names or have links to Holocaust art restitution cases. This list should be added to the human "Names of Concern" when verifying art provenance texts.
May 30, 2021
CIR 4 LINZ S. Lane Faison describes Hitler's Linz museum as "a monument to Safe Art"
From June 1945 until the spring of 1946, Faison, Plaut, and Rousseau detained and interrogated hundreds of Nazi officials and collaborators on the whereabouts of looted works of art. - Monuments Men Foundation
May 17, 2021
Buried for more than half a century

Altaussee Salt/Art Mine discovery after WW II
Lieutenants Kern & Sieber, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
What must it have been like for Samson Lane Faison, Jr., James S. Plaut, Theodore Rousseau, Jr. and Jean Vlug to watch their reports on Nazi art looting and art dealer networks be buried and lost?

Lieutenants Kern & Sieber, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
On April 23, 2001, I phoned Professor Faison and told him the National Archives was issuing the next day a press release announcing the release of Microfilm Publication M-1782, “OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit Reports, 1945-46.” I told him the microfilmed records—including the detailed, consolidated, and final reports—were being made available on May 8, the 56th anniversary of the U.S. Army’s discovery of the salt mine at Alt Aussee, Austria, where the greatest concentration of Nazi plunder from Western Europe was concealed. I asked him if he minded me making his phone number available if I received press inquiries about the records and the work of the ALIU. He said at his age it was tough enough to get up to change the television channel, much less answer the phone regarding things he had done ages ago and which were well-documented in the records we were making available. So, yes, he did mind.
- "An Office of Strategic Services Monuments Man: S. Lane Faison"
This is the seventh in an ongoing series of posts on real-life Monuments Men. Today’s post is by Dr. Greg Bradsher. See related posts on Sir Charles Leonard Woolley, Walter J. Huchthausen, Seymour J. Pomrenze, Mason Hammond, Edith Standen, and Karol Estreicher.May 1, 2021
Names of persecuted Austrian Jewish collectors
How to verify the provenance texts of artworks for names that might indicate a history of Nazi looting or persecution?
There are many potential sources and lists.
In this post, we look an official Austrian report from 2008 that contains names of Austrian Jewish collectors whose art collections were plundered by the Nazis.
Mar 26, 2021
Court cases databases and APIs: art theft and Nazi looted art
Where to find detailed information about lawsuits involving Nazi-looted art?
Caselaw Access Project
Mar 13, 2021
Nazi-looted art: names of plundered collectors to verify in provenances
Books such as Was einmal war. Die enteigneten Kunstsammlungen Wiens by Sophie Lillie provide names of looted collectors
Mar 6, 2021
Jewish Digital Cultural Recovery Project Stiftung Board, Advisory Council and Staff March 2021
JEWISH DIGITAL CULTURAL
RECOVERY PROJECT FOUNDATION
https://jdcrp.org/foundation/
The JDCRP Foundation, “Jewish Digital Cultural Recovery Project Stiftung”, headquartered in Berlin, is the legal administrator of the project and is subject to the German Civil Code. The Foundation embodies the governing framework for the project, and ensures its financial viability. It is comprised of a Board of Trustees, an Executive Board and an Advisory Council.
May 9, 2020
The Holocaust and the Art Market: Alfred Daber
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https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1980.265 |
DABER is a name that can be found in the provenances of numerous artworks. However Alfred Daber, an ALIU Red Flag Name, was known to have trafficked in looted art during the Nazi era.
In this post, we gather information publicly available online in digital form about Alfred Daber. 1) Where - in which museums - does the name Daber appear in provenances? 2) What other names appear together with Daber? 3) What mentions of Daber can be found in databases such as France's Rose Valland MNR and the Getty Provenance Index and its Knoedler file? 4) What Fold3 archival documents mention Daber? and 5) What books or catalogs did Daber author or edit?
In short, what kind of picture emerges of the fates of artworks that, at one time or another, passed through Alfred Daber's hands?
Obviously, the presence of Daber's name in a provenance does not mean that the artwork was ill-gotten. However it is a Red Flag that should not be ignored. Further research is clearly required to account for 1933-1945 provenance gaps and to verify, down to the original sources, the narratives that are provided.
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https://www.fold3.com/image/270257378 |
1) Museums holding artworks that mention the name Daber in the provenance (not exhaustive):
- National Gallery of Art in Washington DC (four artworks source: Spoliation Reports))
- Bristol Museums & Art Gallery (five artworks source: Spoliation Reports))
- Glasgow Museums (source: Spoliation Reports)
- National Galleries of Scotland (source: Spoliation Reports)
- National Gallery in London (five artworks source: Spoliation Reports)
- Cleveland Museum of Art (source: CMA)
- Milwaukee Art Museum (source: Knoedler)
- Norton Simon Museum (source: Knoedler)
- Art Institute of Chicago (source: AIC)
- Yale University Art Gallery (source: Yale website)
- Metropolitan Museum of Art (source:metmuseum.org)
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https://artgallery.yale.edu/collections/objects/25543 |
2) Associated Names
- César de Haucke*
- Raphael Gérard*
- George Petit*
- Jacques Dubourg*
- E.V. Thaw
- Stephen Hahn
- Fritz Nathan*
- Sam Salz
- Arthur Tooth and Sons
- Knoedler*
- Michel Fert
- Ludwig Gutbier
- G. Tanner*
- Georges Renand*
- Daber Gallery
- Blondeau Gallery
* Art Looting Investigation Unit Red Flag Name
3) Daber in France MNR
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Looted paintings in France's MNR that mention Daber |
"Le tableau est acheté 11 250 RM chez Daber, Paris, en 1941 par M. Gutbier"
"Acheté 20 000 RM chez Daber, Paris, en 1941 par Ludwig Gutbier"
"Émile Staub, à Männedorf, en Suisse (où il est encore en 1931) ; on le voit ensuite chez G. Bernheim, Paris (1932) ; chez Carlo Frua de Angeli, à Milan ; chez G. Tanner, à Zurich ; il est exposé en 1937 dans la galerie Alfred Daber, Paris ; enfin il est acheté peu avant la guerre par Georges Renand (cat. Exposition d'Amsterdam en 1938). Le tableau est acheté à Georges Renand à Paris 50 000 RM par M. Wüster (1) pour Joachim von Ribbentrop en 1941"
The Getty Selected Dealer Archives & Locations lists Daber with Blondeau Gallery.
The Getty Provenance Index lists 32 artworks with Daber as the seller, the earliest transaction dates to 1954.
BONNARD, PIERRE
BOUDIN, EUGÈNE LOUIS
BRIANCHON, MAURICE
CARRIÈRE, EUGÈNE
COROT, JEAN BAPTISTE CAMILLE
COURBET, GUSTAVE
DAUMIER, HONORÉ VICTORIN
DELACROIX, EUGÈNE
FANTIN-LATOUR, HENRI
GÉRICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRÉ THÉODORE
GONZALÈS, EVA
GUIGOU, PAUL CAMILLE
MONET, CLAUDE
RENOIR, PIERRE AUGUSTE
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 187, Stock No. A6507
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 66, Stock No. A7173
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 200, Stock No. A6709
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 219, Stock No. A9243
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 137, Stock No. A5825
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 154, Stock No. A6065
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 154, Stock No. A6066
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 183, Stock No. A6438
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 183, Stock No. A6439
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 183, Stock No. A6440
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 183, Stock No. A6441
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 206, Stock No. A9095
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 107, Stock No. A5375
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 154,
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 171, Stock No. A8691
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 84, Stock No. A7405
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 180, Stock No. A8791
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 82, Stock No. A7384
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 148, Stock No. A8408
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 175, Stock No. A6334
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 73, Stock No. A7269
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 73, Stock No. A7270
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 73, Stock No. A7271
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 137, Stock No. A5833
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 154, Stock No. A6064
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 40, Stock No. A6064
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 174, Stock No. A8723
Knoedler Stock Book 10, Page 186, Stock No. A6492
Knoedler Stock Book 11, Page 173, Stock No. A8720
4) FOLD 3 and the archival mentions of Alfred Daber
https://www.fold3.com/document/270104113/
https://www.fold3.com/document/270101397/
https://www.fold3.com/image/270037474