Showing posts with label art history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art history. Show all posts

May 12, 2020

Missing art people and the Holocaust

How information about Jewish art  collectors who died in the Holocaust goes missing in the semantic web of linked data.

1. How many art collectors, dealers, curators, museum directors, art historians or gallery owners died in Nazi concentration camps, ghettos or jails?

As of this writing, Wikidata (which includes every entry in Wikipedia and more) can give us the names of exactly 21 persons.


Clearly, many names are missing. Why?

Because to be picked up in the Wikidata query used (https://w.wiki/Qb7) certain information (profession, death place) must have been registered by someone in Wikidata. If any of this information is missing, the query will not find the name.


2. What happens if we try to annotate the Wikidata list of 21 names using DBpedia Spotlight? 

The individuals exist in Wikidata. Will DBpedia, an important linked data hub, using by many tools for entity matching and linking, be able to identify these individuals and link to them via Spotlight?

To find out, we took the list of the 21 names produced by Wikidata, put them in sentence form and ran them through the DBpedia SPOTLIGHT annotation API.


This is the list of art collectors, dealers, historians, curators, etc who died in Nazi camps, ghettos or jails: Adam Abel died in Flossenbürg concentration camp, Anton Mayer died in Neuengamme concentration camp, August Liebmann Mayer died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, François Lang died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Friedrich Gutmann died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Fritz Grünbaum died in Dachau concentration camp, Gertrud Kantorowicz died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Heinrich Feurstein died in Dachau concentration camp, Henri Hinrichsen died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Karl Freund died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Leo Grünstein died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Lisa Hamburg died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Lucien Graux died in Dachau concentration camp, Ludwig Pollak died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Max Frankenburger died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Max Silberberg died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Q28192906 died in Theresienstadt concentration camp, Walter Cohen died in Dachau concentration camp, Walter Westfeld died in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Wilhelm Kurtz died in Auschwitz II-Birkenau concentration camp, Wilhelm Mautner died in Auschwitz-Birkenau

3. As you can see from the results below, very few of these Holocaust victims were correctly identified. 

Of the 21, only four - Friedrich Gutmann, Fritz Grünbaum, Wilhelm Mautner and Ludwig Pollak - were correctly annotated in DBpedia Spotlight.



  • Friedrich Bernhard Eugen "Fritz" Gutmann (15 November 1886 – 13 April 1944) was a Dutch banker and art collector.The collection and the fate of Fritz Gutmann is described by his grandson, Simon Goodman, in "The Orpheus Clock" (Pub. Simon & Schuster, Aug. 2015). (en)
  • Fritz Grünbaum (7 April 1880 in Brno, Moravia as Franz Friedrich Grünbaum – 14 January 1941 at the Dachau concentration camp, Germany) was an Austrian Jewish cabaret artist, operetta and pop song writer, director, actor and master of ceremonies. (en)
  • Wilhelm Mautner (1889-1944) was born in Vienna. He was an Austrian-German economist and attorney-in-fact of the Rotterdamse Bank who spent a part of his life in the Netherlands. Mautner was born Jewish. He was also an art collector. (en)
  • Ludwig Pollak (14 September 1868, Prague – 1943, Auschwitz concentration camp) was an Austro-Czech classical archaeologist, antiquities dealer, and director of the Museo Barracco di Scultura Antica in Rome. He is perhaps best known for discovering in 1906 the missing right arm of Laocoön in the famous ancient Roman sculpture Laocoön and His Sons.

No matches or mistaken matches were found for 17 of the 21. Mistaken identities included: 


  • Ernst Hartwig Kantorowicz (May 3, 1895 – September 9, 1963) was a German-American historian of medieval political and intellectual history and art, known for his 1927 book Kaiser Friedrich der Zweite on Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, and The King's Two Bodies (1957) on medieval and early modern ideologies of monarchy and the state. (en)
  • Karl W. Freund, A.S.C. (January 16, 1890 – May 3, 1969) was a cinematographer and film director best known for photographing Metropolis (1927), Dracula (1931), and television's I Love Lucy (1951-1957). (en)
  • Leo Thomas McGarry is a fictional character played by American actor John Spencer on the television serial drama The West Wing. The role earned Spencer the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series in 2002. McGarry's character, the former United States Secretary of Labor, begins the series as the White House Chief of Staff. He is President Josiah Bartlet's best friend and a father figure to the Senior Staff, particularly White House Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman and Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn. (en)
  • Lisa Marie Simpson is a fictional character in the animated television series The Simpsons. She is the middle child and most intelligent of the Simpson family.
  • Charles Graux (23 November 1852 – 8 January 1882) was a French classicist and palaeographer. Apart from scores of articles and reviews, he published important critical editions of works by Xenophon and Plutarch and pioneering, descriptive catalogs of the medieval copies of ancient Greek texts preserved in the libraries of Spain and Denmark. His most enduring contributions were to the history of ancient stichometry.
  • This is a list of the major characters in Robotech, the American adaptation of three Japanese animated series: The Super Dimension Fortress Macross, The Super Dimension Cavalry Southern Cross, and Genesis Climber Mospeada, as a single TV series. The series is divided into parts called "generations" which are subtitled The Macross Saga, The Second Generation, and The New Generation
  • Westfeld is a town in the district of Hildesheim in Lower Saxony, Germany.
  • Kurtz is a central fictional character in Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness. A trader of ivory in Africa and commander of a trading post, he monopolises his position as a demigod among native Africans.

These errors occur even though the individuals exist in Wikidata and are coded with enough information (name, profession, place of death) to be picked up in the Wikidata Query.

4. Why is it so hard to match via DBpedia the names of Jewish Art Collectors who died in the Holocaust?

One reason (but not the only reason) is that, even though DBpedia includes Wikidata Qcodes, it still filters its linked data information through Wikipedia. 

So even if something exists in Wikidata and is properly referenced, it does not exist in DBpedia. 
That is a partial explanation. There are also individuals who exist in Wikipedia who are not picked up by DBpedia Spotlight in this exercise. 

Below is the JSON code produced by the DBpedia Spotlight annotation API.
(The @URI is the DPpedia resource.
The @surfaceForm is the word as it actually appeared in the text.)

In some cases, the problem begins with the identification of the surface form, like "Westfeld" instead of "Walter Westfeld" or "Max" instead of "Max Silberberg".

(Particularly amazing is the matching of Max to a List of Robotech characters. Thus, using advanced natural language processing, entity matching and reconciliation, the closest we get to linked data for Holocaust victim and art collector Max Silberberg is "major characters in Robotech, the American adaptation of three Japanese animated series: The Super Dimension Fortress Macross, The Super Dimension Cavalry Southern Cross, and Genesis Climber Mospeada"?)

This misidentification is all the more noteworthy because both Walter Westfeld and Max Silberberg have Wikipedia pages.

However Walter Westfeld's is only in German while Max Silberberg's are in German and Russian.

The lack of an English-language Wikipedia page is another reason for the individual's invisibility in any API that uses only English.

(There are more reasons, to be explored later)


5. Below: Result, in JSON, of the DBpedia Spotlight annotation of the names of the 21 art collectors and other lost art people who died in the Holocaust.

"@confidence": "0.5",
  "@support": "0",
  "@types": "",
  "@sparql": "",
  "@policy": "whitelist",
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  ]
}

TRY IT

curl -X GET "https://api.dbpedia-spotlight.org/en/annotate?text=%22This%20is%20the%20list%20of%20art%20collectors%2C%20dealers%2C%20historians%2C%20curators%2C%20etc%20who%20died%20in%20Nazi%20camps%2C%20ghettos%20or%20jails%3A%20Adam%20Abel%20died%20in%20Flossenb%C3%BCrg%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Anton%20Mayer%20died%20in%20Neuengamme%20concentration%20camp%2C%20August%20Liebmann%20Mayer%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Fran%C3%A7ois%20Lang%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Friedrich%20Gutmann%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Fritz%20Gr%C3%BCnbaum%20died%20in%20Dachau%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Gertrud%20Kantorowicz%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Heinrich%20Feurstein%20died%20in%20Dachau%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Henri%20Hinrichsen%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Karl%20Freund%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Leo%20Gr%C3%BCnstein%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Lisa%20Hamburg%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Lucien%20Graux%20died%20in%20Dachau%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Ludwig%20Pollak%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Max%20Frankenburger%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Max%20Silberberg%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Q28192906%20died%20in%20Theresienstadt%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Walter%20Cohen%20died%20in%20Dachau%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Walter%20Westfeld%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%20Wilhelm%20Kurtz%20died%20in%20Auschwitz%20II-Birkenau%20concentration%20camp%2C%20Wilhelm%20Mautner%20died%20in%20Auschwitz-Birkenau%2C%22" -H "accept: application/json"


6. Thoughts

People are relying increasingly on automated systems to retrieve, read, understand, summarise, link, analyse and repackage real world texts.  However the underlying reference systems are terribly weak when it comes to a topic like Jewish art collectors who died in the Holocaust. The resulting information loss and information distortion is likely to propagate throughout systems undetected, harming our knowledge of the world.
Automated quality control systems are unfit for dealing with this issue.


7. Comments, questions, and criticisms of this draft are most welcome.


 WIKIDATA QUERY

#Art Collectors and other art people who died in Nazi concentration camps or jails

SELECT DISTINCT ?item ?itemLabel ?placediedLabel ?placedied  WHERE {
{ ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q1792450.} UNION { ?item wdt:P31 wd:Q1007870. } UNION { ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q173950.} UNION { ?item wdt:P921 wd:Q328376.} UNION { ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q10732476.} UNION { ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q446966.} UNION { ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q22132694.} UNION { ?item wdt:P106 wd:Q674426.}


SERVICE wikibase:label { bd:serviceParam wikibase:language "en" }
?item wdt:P20 ?placedied.
{ ?placedied wdt:P31 wd:Q328468.} UNION { ?placedied wdt:P31 wd:Q152081. } UNION { ?placedied wdt:P31 wd:Q153813.} UNION { ?placedied wdt:P31 wd:Q153813.} UNION { ?placedied wdt:P31 wd:Q2583015.}}


____


PHOTO: http://www.silesiancollections.eu/Works-of-art/Painting/Renoir-Auguste-Reading

Apr 12, 2020

UK Spoliation Reports Collections Trust downloadable DATASET CSV


InstitutionArtworks in Spoliation Reports from UK Museums, UK Collections Trust 15 April 2020
British Museum7329
Courtauld Gallery3133
Fitzwilliam Museum2415
Ashmolean1501
Victoria & Albert Museum559
Tate524
Glasgow Museums344
Manchester City Galleries298
British Library239
Amgueddfa Cymru168
National Gallery165
Whitworth Art Gallery149
National Galleries of Scotland131
Southampton City Art Gallery128
Hull City Museums & Art Gallery93
York Art Gallery72
Bowes Museum62
Bristol Museums & Art Gallery55
Leicester City Museums54
National Maritime Museum47
Northampton Museums43
Birmingham Museums And Art Gallery32
Barber Institute of Fine Arts32
Hunterian Museum & Art Gallery28
Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums20
Norfolk Museums Service11
Museum of London11
Institution10
Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums10
National Museums Liverpool7
National Portrait Gallery5
National Museums of Scotland2
Science Museum Group1
National Trust for Scotland1
0
Grand Total17679


See the Dataset of Provenances for each artwork published by Collections Trust here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vQ0HqOLC2dqJvDjASzgIzNAh125Ywz3WhA3YY1wSx-2-Cgk3en9eVNSj3xIzakG4SVZ0fPib4dw6WZQ/pubhtml


Format: CSV


DescriptionThis dataset gathers together in an easy to download CSV file provenance information and questions contained in the Spoliation Reports from UK Museums published by the Collections Trust.  It is intended to facilitate research into Holocaust-era provenance for scholars, art historians and families. 
The original and best source of information concerning provenance remains the Spoliation Reports for each museum on the Collections Trust website.

Download CSV File : 17679  provenances and questions about provenance gaps from the Spoliation Reports of UK Museums in CSV here


Version: 2





For the most recent information on the Spoliation Reports from UK Museums, please consult the website of  the Collections Trust UK Spoliation Reports for UK Museums

Apr 8, 2020

DATASET: National Gallery of Art Nazi Era Provenance PUBLIC



Dataset name: National Gallery of Art Enhanced Provenance Research Dataset NEPIP PUBLIC


Description: This enhanced Provenance dataset has been constructed from  information available on the public internet site of the National Gallery of Art (NGA)  The dataset merges the list of artworks on the Nazi Era Provenance Internet Portal with provenance texts published on the NGA detailed item pages. 
This dataset is intended to facilitate research into Holocaust-era provenance for scholars, art historians and families. 
The original and best source of information concerning provenance remains the National Gallery of Art  public website.

Format: Google Sheet

URL: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vTnJR2T4TtT-iFaioInvWpn8xhnhxjrWebFyWCvM3lodUssE0b_j64-vOC-PT17aVrxd-lcGp_SDntU/pubhtml?gid=1646299987&single=true


Download: CSV



Contents:

1. NEPIP National Gallery of Art 

2. About this file

3. NEPIP by Artists

4. NEPIP by Credit Line

5. NEPIP Provenance includes "private", "anonymous", "art market"

6. All of above

Publisher: OAD

Date of Publication: April 6, 2020



Example of content: Provenance text contains word "private", "anonymous", or "art market" 


---


Original data sources that were merged to create the new 
DATASET: National Gallery of Art Nazi Era Provenance PUBLIC:



Jan 22, 2020

Private collections: Albertina Museum, Vienna

A selection of Provenance texts that contain the word "privat" in the online database of paintings and sculptures at the Albertina Museum in Vienna:

ArtistTitleDateInventory numberProvenance
Alexej von Jawlensky (Torschok (Gouv. Twer) 1864 - 1941 Wiesbaden) Mädchen mit Blumenhut1910GE52DLHelene von Jawlensky, Wiesbaden; M. Olchansky, Montreux; Ferdinand Näscher, Zürich; Privatbesitz, New York; Leonard Hutton Galleries, New York (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Amedeo Modigliani (Livorno 1884 - 1920 Paris)Weiblicher Halbakt1918GE85DLLeopold Zborowski, Paris; Galerie Bing & Cie, Paris; Sammlung Sabonrand; Sammlung René Gaffe, Brüssel; Paul Rosenberg & Co., New York; George Friedland, Merion Station/PA; Privatbesitz Schweiz; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Anton Faistauer (St. Martin (Salzburg) 1887 - 1930 Wien)Blumenstillleben1918GE243DLPrivatbesitz Wien; 61. Kunstauktion im Kinsky, Wien, 21. November 2006, Lot 85 (laut Koella, 2012)
Augusto Giacometti (Stampa (Bergell) 1877 - 1947 Zürich)Im Garten: Friede1915GE45DLA. L. Vischer-von-Bonstetten, Basel; Galerie Beyeler, Basel; Arthur Stoll, Arlesheim/Corseau; Privatbesitz Schweiz; Auktion Galerie Kornfeld, Bern, 17. Juni 2005, Lot 42 (laut Koella, 2012)
Claude Monet (Paris 1840 - 1926 Giverny)Der Seerosenteichum 1917 - 19GE87DLMichel Monet, Giverny; Privatbesitz Griechenland; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Claude Monet (Paris 1840 - 1926 Giverny)Das Haus in den Rosen1925GE88DLMichel Monet, Giverny; Mme Berr de Turique, Paris; Galerie Beyeler, Basel; H.E. Smeets, Weert (Holland); Sammlung J.E. Smeets, Weert (Holland); Galerie Beyeler, Basel; Privatbesitz New York; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Cuno Amiet (Solothurn 1868 - 1961 Oschwand)Der Hausbau1908GE11DLPrivatbesitz Schweiz; Salis & Vertes, Salzburg (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Edvard Munch (Løten bei Hamar (Norwegen) 1863 - 1944 Ekely)Winterlandschaft1915GE89DLPrivatbesitz Norwegen; Privatbesitz Liechtenstein; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Emil Nolde (Nolde (Schleswig) 1867 - 1956 Seebüll) Wald1909GE91DLDr. Richard Hessberg, Essen; Privatbesitz Bolivien; Georg Schäfer, Schweinfurt; Privatbesitz Zürich; Galerie Neher, Essen; Galerie Haas, Vaduz (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Erich Heckel (Döbeln 1883 - 1970 Radolfzell)Liegende1909GE374DLBesitz des Künstlers (bis 1964); Privatsammlung Düsseldorf; Sammlung Henriette Dell-Werner, Wien (laut Koella, 2012)
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (Aschaffenburg 1880 - 1938 Frauenkirch bei Davos)Bahnhofseinfahrt: Bahnhof Löbau1911-1912GE406DLGalerie Neue Kunst Hans Goltz, München; Dr. Karl Lilienfeld, Berlin und New York; 1932; Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett, Stuttgart 1957; Graf Rüdiger von der Goltz, Düsseldorf 1958; Privatsammlung, Deutschland 1976; Dresdner Bank, Frankfurt 1976; Privatbesitz 1986; Sotheby's Genf
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (Aschaffenburg 1880 - 1938 Frauenkirch bei Davos)Nackter Jüngling und Mädchen am Strand1913GE57DLvNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz Düsseldorf; Dr. Donn D. Beeman, Hollywood; Galerie Art Focus, Zürich (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Catalogue
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (Aschaffenburg 1880 - 1938 Frauenkirch bei Davos)Zwei Akte im Raum1914GE57DLrNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz Düsseldorf; Dr. Donn D. Beeman, Hollywood; Galerie Art Focus, Zürich
Catalogue
Fernand Léger (Argentan 1881 - 1955 Gif-sur-Yvette) Zwei Profile1928GE74DLGalerie Simon, Paris; Galerie Louise Leiris, Paris; Curt Valentin Gallery, New York; Raoul Lévy, Paris; Edmond de Rothschild, Paris; Privatbesitz Genf; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Georges Rouault (Paris 1871 - 1958 Paris)Pierrot1939GE111DLGalerie Vollard, Paris; Sam Selz, Inc., New York; Edwin E. Hokin, Chicago; The Art Institute, Chicago; Hussein Pacha, Villefranche; Privatbesitz, Paris (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Henri Lebasque (Champigné (Maine-et-Loire) 1865 - 1937 Le Cannet)Mädchen in einer Mittelmeerlandschaftum 1907 - 10GE72DLKunsthandel, Paris; Privatbesitz Lyon; Galerie Rämi, Zürich (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Henri Lebasque (Champigné (Maine-et-Loire) 1865 - 1937 Le Cannet)Auf der grünen Bank, Sanary1911GE73DLMarthe Lebasque (Tochter des Künstlers); Privatbesitz Frankreich; Richard Green, London; Privatbesitz; Auktion Sotheby’s New York, 4. Mai 2006, Lot 180 (laut Koella, 2012)
Henri Matisse (Le Cateau Cambrésis 1869 - 1954 Cimiez bei Nizza)Das gestreifte Kleid1938GE82DLPaul Rosenberg, London; Galerie Rosengart, Luzern; Riccardo Jucker, Mailand; Privatbesitz, New York; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Joan Miró (Barcelona 1893 - 1983 Palma de Mallorca) Vögel und Insekten1938GE83DLPierre Matisse Gallery, New York; James Butler, New York; Henry Clifford, Radnor/PA; Galerie Rosengart, Luzern; Privatbesitz Italien; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Johannes Itten (Süderen-Linden 1888 - 1967 Zürich)Lichtkreis1915GE50DLNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz Zürich; Galerie am Lindenplatz, Vaduz (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Catalogue
Kazimir Malewitsch (Kiew 1878 - 1935 Leningrad) Birkenhainum 1905 - 06GE79DLNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Kazimir Malewitsch (Kiew 1878 - 1935 Leningrad) Mann in suprematistischer Landschaftum 1930 - 31GE80DLNikolai Chardhziew, Moskau; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
László Moholy-Nagy (Bácsborsód (Ungarn) 1895 - 1946 Chicago)Ungarische Felderum 1919/1920GE152DLPrivatbesitz; Sammlung Forberg
Bibliography
Lyonel Feininger (New York 1871 - 1956 New York)Die Lokomotive mit dem großen Rad1910GE37DLNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz New York; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Lyonel Feininger (New York 1871 - 1956 New York)Promenade in Arcueil1915GE38DLNachlass des Künstlers; Marlborough Fine Art Ltd., London; Saul P. Steinberg, New York; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Marianne von Werefkin (Tula (Russland) 1860 - 1938 Ascona) Sturmwindum 1915 - 16GE132DLD. Hagmann, Küsnacht; Privatbesitz Deutschland; Galerie Art Focus, Zürich (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Maurice de Vlaminck (Paris 1876 - 1958 Rueil-la-Gadelière)Die Seine bei Chatouum 1906/07GE130DLGalerie de Seine, Paris; Leopold Starkmann de Féltorony, Vallauris; Sammlung Mme Bonaglia, Paris; Peter Matthews, London; Galerie Beyeler, Basel; Privatbesitz Monte Carlo; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Max Beckmann (Leipzig 1884 - 1950 New York)Frau mit Katze1942GE14DLV. Schnitzler, Murnau; Privatbesitz New York; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Max Pechstein (Zwickau 1881 - 1955 Berlin) Meererzählung1920GE143DLPrivatsammlung Deutschland (?); Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett; Galerie Motte; Genf; Sammlung Forberg
Bibliography
Max Pechstein (Zwickau 1881 - 1955 Berlin) Iris im Abendschatten1925GE95DLRegierungsrat Dr. Teutsch; Privatbesitz Schweiz; Auktion Galerie Koller, Zürich, 4. Juni 2002, Lot 28 (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Max Peiffer Watenphul (Weferlingen bei Helmstadt 1896 - 1976 Rom) Stillleben mit rotem Mohn1929GE270DLPrivatbesitz Österreich; Galerie Welz, Salzburg (laut Koella, 2012)
Michail Larionow (Tiraspol (Moldawien) 1881 - 1964 Fontenay-aux-Roses bei Paris) Durch das Maschennetz, Badende1904GE312DLSammlung E. Rubin, UDSSR; Privatbesitz Paris; Galerie Gmurzynska, Zürich (laut Koella, 2012)
Natalia Gontscharowa (Nagaewo, bei Tula (Russland) 1881 - 1962 Paris) Die blaue Kuh
Series / Cycle
Teil des neunteiligen Polyptichons "Weinlese" 1911
um 1911GE46DLGalerie Paul Guillaume, Paris; Sidney Simon, Paris (Geschenk der Künstlerin 1958); Leonard Hutton Galleries, New York; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Nikolai Suetin (Kaluga 1897 - 1954 Leningrad) Frau mit Kreuz1928GE122DLNachlass des Künstlers; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Catalogue
Oskar Kokoschka (Pöchlarn 1886 - 1980 Villeneuve)Ansicht von Vernet-les-Bains1925GE61DLGalerie Paul Cassirer, Berlin; Galerie M. Goldschmidt, Frankfurt a.M.; Galerie Georg Caspari, München; Galerie Paul Cassirer, Berlin; Amsterdamsche Kunsthandel P. Cassirer, Amsterdam; Elmer Rice, New York; Marlborough Gallery, New York; Privatbesitz Schweiz; Privatbesitz Süddeutschland; Galerie Thomas, München (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Oskar Kokoschka (Pöchlarn 1886 - 1980 Villeneuve)Im Garten II1934GE64DLlaut WV Kokoschka: Josef Zadra, Krivinná bei Mährisch-Ostrau; [Dr. Vondraček, Mährisch-Ostrau]; Privatbesitz, Mährisch-Ostrau; Christie's, London (15.10.1995, Nr.162 mit Farbabb.); Kunsthandel Martin Suppan, Wien (2004); Herbert Batliner, Vaduz
Pablo Picasso (Málaga 1881 - 1973 Mougins) Die Spielkarten1912GE98DLGalerie Kahnweiler, Paris; Privatbesitz Berlin; Richard Doetsch-Benziger, Basel; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Paul Klee (Münchenbuchsee 1879 - 1940 Muralto)Ähnlich wie 49 (Revier eines Katers)1919, 50GE151DLLily Klee, Bern; Klee-Gesellschaft, Bern; Galerie Rosengart, Luzern; Galerie Jeanne-Bucher, Paris; Tom A. Noonan, Wiesbaden/Washington; Burg Lauenstein, Bayern; Mrs. Norman, Washington; Marisa del Re Gallery, New York; Privatbesitz; Sammlung Forberg
Paul Klee (Münchenbuchsee 1879 - 1940 Muralto)Das Märchen von den beiden Fischen1937, 187 (T 7)GE137DLPrivatbesitz Bern; Galerie Rosengart, Luzern; Sammlung Forberg
Paul Signac (Paris 1863 - 1935 Paris)Venedig, die rosa Wolke (Ankerplatz bei der Giudecca)1909GE117DLGalerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris; August Deusser, Düsseldorf; Privatbesitz Tokyo; Auktion Sotheby’s New York, 13. Mai 1998, Lot 19 (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Paul Signac (Paris 1863 - 1935 Paris)Antibes, die Türme1911GE118DLGalerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris; Pierre Baudin, Paris; Sammlung Guetta, Paris; Sammlung Baudoin, Paris; Privatbesitz Genf; Galerie Marcel Bernheim, Paris; Privatbesitz Kanada; Auktion Christie’s New York, 3. Nov. 2004, Lot 34 (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Paul Signac (Paris 1863 - 1935 Paris)Antibes, Gewitter1919GE119DLLéon Marseille, Paris; Willy Dubois, Bruxelles; Bernheim-Jeune, Paris; Gaston Lévy, Paris; Privatbesitz; Auktion Sotheby’s London, 9. Feb. 2005, Lot 447 (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Pawel Filonow (Moskau 1883 - 1941 Leningrad) Oktoberformelum 1921GE39DLEwdokia Nikolajewna Glebowa, Leningrad; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Pawel Filonow (Moskau 1883 - 1941 Leningrad) Ohne Titel (Kopf)um 1925 - 30GE40DLEwdokia Nikolajewna Glebowa, Leningrad; Privatbesitz; Galerie Gmurzynska, Köln (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Catalogue
Pierre Bonnard (Fontenay-aux-Roses 1867 - 1947 Le Cannet)Grauer Akt im Profilum 1933GE16DLPrivatbesitz Paris; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Raoul Dufy (Le Havre 1877 - 1953 Forcalquier)Das Guéridon, Rue Séguier1909GE396DLSammlung Josefowitz, Pully/Schweiz; Sammlung Gallibert, Paris; Privatbesitz Amsterdam; Galerie Gmurzynska, Zürich (laut Koella, 2012)
Raoul Dufy (Le Havre 1877 - 1953 Forcalquier)Meeresstillleben1925GE204DLPrivatbesitz Paris; Galerie Beyeler, Basel (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Théo van Rysselberghe (Gent 1862 - 1926 Saint-Clair)Sitzender Akt1905GE127DLHenri-Edmond Cross, Saint-Clair (Var); Privatbesitz Belgien; Galerie Salis, Salzburg (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Wassily Kandinsky (Moskau 1866 - 1944 Neuilly-sur-Seine) Große Fontäne im Nymphenburger Park1901 - 03GE54DLMarianne von Werefkin, Ascona; Alexander von Werefkin, Zürich; Privatbesitz Süddeutschland; Galerie Gunzenhauser, München; Neumeister Kunstauktionshaus, München (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Wassily Kandinsky (Moskau 1866 - 1944 Neuilly-sur-Seine) Innerer Bund1929GE55DLSammlung Möller, Basel; Robert Brest, Buenos Aires; Acquavella Galleries, New York; Privatbesitz; Thomas Ammann Fine Art, Zürich (laut Koella/Billeter 2005)
Wilhelm Kohlhoff (Berlin 1893 - 1971 Schweinfurt)Blumenstilllebenum 1920GE294DLPrivatbesitz Zürich (laut Koella, 2012)
Catalogue

Questions for university students majoring in art history or taking a course in provenance research, in particular of the Nazi period 1933-1945


1) Which names appear frequently in provenances that also contain the word "privat"?
2) What do you know about these names? 

  • Are any of the names Jewish collectors who were persecuted by Nazis from 1933-1945? 
  • Are any of the names individuals who were flagged for involvement in the Nazi era art trade  by the Art Looting Investigation Unit in their 1945-6 Red Flag List of Names?
  • Have any of the names appeared in lawsuits or claims for restitution in any capacity? (claimants, defendants, individuals involved in the ownership history?) If so, which?
  • Are there any patterns that you can detect in studying these provenances grouped together?
  • Of the 51 artworks presented in this list, which FIVE should be the top priority for further provenance research? Why? Which FIVE should be the lowest priority for further provenance research? Why?
  • The above list represents a very small selection of artworks from the Albertina museum, paintings created before 1945 which entered the museum's collection after 1933 and which contain the word "privat" in the provenance text. What other kinds of selections do you think are important to make in order to identify priorities for further provenance research? Why?