Feb 24, 2025

Restitutions by the Bavarian State Painting Collections since 1998 (summarized in English)

Restitutions

Overview of the Restitutions by the Bavarian State Painting Collections

Since 1998, the Bavarian State Painting Collections have restituted 24 works from 15 collections. On this page, you can find more information about past restitutions.


March 13, 2024: Restitution of a Painting and Two Sculptures to the Heirs of Jakob Goldschmidt

The Bavarian State Painting Collections and the Bavarian National Museum have restituted a painting by Hans Wertinger (Count Palatine Philipp, Bishop of Freising, Inv. No. 12030) and two 16th-century Nuremberg sculptures(wood statuettes "Adam and Eve", Inv. No. 53/137 and 53/138) to the heirs of Jakob Goldschmidt (1882–1955), a Berlin banker and entrepreneur.

The painting was transferred to the Bavarian State Painting Collections in 1953 as part of former Nazi art holdings, and the sculptures were acquired by the Bavarian National Museum that same year through an exchange.

Jakob Goldschmidt, the Collector

Jakob Goldschmidt was one of the most influential bankers of the Weimar Republic and was considered a central figure in the financial world. He held a leading position on the board of the Danat Bank (Darmstädter and Nationalbank) and served on more than 100 supervisory boards.

Goldschmidt began collecting art during World War I and built a significant collection. He was also a patron of Berlin museums and the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. His villa in Potsdam's Neubabelsberg district, built in 1921, was adorned with numerous artworks, as was the villa he acquired in Berlin’s Matthäikirchstraße in 1929.

Following the Great Depression of 1931, when Danat Bank collapsed, the Nazis blamed him for the banking crisis. In April 1933, he fled to Switzerland and later to New York in 1936.

The Nazis imposed severe financial restrictions on him, including a Reich Flight Tax of over 1.8 million Reichsmarks, revoked his German citizenship in 1940, and confiscated his remaining assets in Germany in 1941.

Goldschmidt managed to smuggle part of his art collection abroad with the help of industrialist Fritz Thyssen. However, much of his collection remained in Germany, with major portions being auctioned off in 1936 and 1938.

Provenance of the Works

  • The Hans Wertinger painting was purchased in June 1936 by Julius Streicher, the Gauleiter of Franconia, at the Hugo Helbing auction house in Frankfurt.
  • Around 300 works from Goldschmidt’s collection were anonymously listed as coming from a "Berlin collector."
  • The two sculptures were also auctioned in 1936 but remained unsold. They were later offered again in March 1938 at Lempertz Auction House in Cologne.
  • The sculptures’ provenance traces them to Johannes Hinrichsen, an art dealer from Bad Aussee, who likely acquired them at Lempertz and later sold them to Swiss arms manufacturer Emil Bührle.
  • In 1953, the Bavarian National Museum acquired them from Bührle through a trade involving a 14th-century Pietà.

It is undeniable that Goldschmidt’s financial downfall was a direct result of Nazi persecution. The forced sales of his art collection would not have taken place without the Nazi regime, classifying them as persecution-related asset seizures.

As a result, the Bavarian Ministry of Science and Arts approved the restitution.


Statements on the Restitution

Markus Blume, Minister for Science and Arts:
"Provenance research results are clear: Jakob Goldschmidt was wrongfully persecuted by the Nazi regime and dispossessed of his wealth. Returning these works is not just a given—it is an ethical obligation. Restituting stolen cultural property restores justice and contributes to addressing Nazi crimes. I sincerely thank the Bavarian State Painting Collections and the Bavarian National Museum for their meticulous research that led to this restitution."

Prof. Dr. Bernhard Maaz, Director of the Bavarian State Painting Collections:
"Hans Wertinger was a masterful Renaissance portraitist. We are honored to return this exceptional artwork to Goldschmidt’s descendants, ensuring that this remarkable collection’s history is remembered."

Dr. Frank Matthias Kammel, Director of the Bavarian National Museum:
"Restituting the two statuettes from the workshop of Veit Stoß is an important moment for the museum."

Statement from the Goldschmidt heirs:
"The heirs of Jakob Goldschmidt are pleased with the restitution, which acknowledges that the loss of these artworks was the result of Nazi persecution and anti-Semitic propaganda."


Previous Restitutions

May 9, 2022: Restitution of "Ulanen auf dem Marsch" by Hans von Marées to the Max Stern Estate

  • Following a 2015 restitution request from the Max Stern Estate, the case was brought before the Advisory Commission for Nazi-Looted Art Restitution.
  • The commission recommended returning the painting under two conditions:
    1. The Max Stern Estate cannot sell the painting for 10 years, allowing time for a possible primary victim to be identified.
    2. If new evidence suggests that the sale was not Nazi-related, the foundation must return the painting to the Bavarian State Painting Collections.
  • The painting was restituted on May 9, 2022 under these conditions.

August 27, 2021: Restitution of "Frühlingslandschaft" by Johann Sperl to the Heirs of Sigmund Waldes

  • Research confirmed that Sigmund Waldes lost the painting due to Nazi persecution in 1939/41.

May 31, 2021: Restitution of "Fischerboote bei Frauenchiemsee" by Joseph Wopfner to the Heirs of Alfred Isay

  • Originally planned for March 2020, the restitution was delayed due to COVID-19 travel restrictions.

April 23, 2021: Restitution of a Late Medieval Panel Depicting St. Florian

  • The art dealership A.S. Drey had owned the panel before the Nazis confiscated it.

August 5, 2019: Restitution of Nine Artworks to the Heirs of Julius and Semaya Franziska Davidsohn

  • The couple’s collection was confiscated in Munich in 1938.

July 25, 2018: Restitution of a Painting by Ernst Immanuel Müller

  • The work originally belonged to Ludwig Friedmann, a Nazi victim.

July 21, 2017: Restitution of "The Raising of Lazarus"

  • Formerly part of the James von Bleichröder collection.

May 15, 2013: Restitution of Two Max Pechstein Watercolors

  • Belonged to Curt Glaser and George Behrens.
    Streit um NS-Raubkunst: «Der Fisch stinkt vom Kopf»
  •  and a Marian painting by Cristoforo de' Moretti.

June 23, 2008: Restitution of a Willem Kalf Still Life

  • Returned to Peter Block, grandson of collector Josef Block.

September 14, 2005: Restitution of "Musical Entertainment" by Fritz Schider

  • Originally owned by Max Meirowsky.

October 5, 2004: Restitution of "Twilight at Lake Garda" by Hans Thoma

  • Formerly in the Ottmar Strauss collection.

March 13, 2000: Restitution of "The Three Ages of Man" by Leopold Graf Kalckreuth

  • Returned to the heirs of Elisabeth Glanville.


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Press


For more information about the current state of Nazi-era provenance research in the Bavarian State Paintings Collections see:

Nazi-looted art: Red alert



Dispute over Nazi-looted art: “The fish stinks from the head”



Jewish heirs: “Bavaria betrayed us” - Claims Conference speaks of “breach of trust”



Nazi-looted art scandal in Bavaria
Concealed and abducted

The Bavarian State Painting Collection in Munich is sitting on Nazi-looted art. To the detriment of heirs, it does not pass on its knowledge about the artworks.



Fierce criticism of Bavaria's handling of Nazi-looted art




***

"

The Glanville Case

In 1999 the Glanville family approached the Commission for assistance in locating a triptych looted from their home in Vienna when the family fled the Nazis in 1938. 

Marietta Glanville described the looted painting as "an icon of my childhood."  Her mother, Elizabeth Glanville, had searched for the looted von Kalckreuth painting since 1948.  In 1971 she learned that the painting was in the Bavarian State Paintings Collection, Munich which had acquired it from a private collector in 1942.  But, in the same year, her claim was denied by the Bavarian Compensation Office on the grounds that the deadlines for restitution had expired in 1948.  In 1983 Elizabeth Glanville died without having been able to recover her painting."




Jan 27, 2025

Nazi-looted art provenance research: names to verify in provenance texts of art museums

Names of Concern to verify in Art Provenances for European artworks created before 1945 and acquired after 1932, contains persons and organisations


(Wikidata Queries run January 25, 2025)

Merges persons of concern and organisations of concern in Nazi looted art and includes, where available Status,  GND, VIAF, Proveana and LCCN identifiers as well as alternate spellings for entity matching in provenance texts.



Download data in CSV format



Url of Public Google Sheet:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vTuf7QIW4T15_5YJURSlvhZalwsdVrCNHiv5Iq4PaY-AepMw-rovx4aw9cleEI8S3NPInv4uMk9S5XD/pub?gid=103406480&single=true&output=csv


Description: 


The dataset contains 745 entries and 10 columns, with the following details:

  1. Columns Overview:

    • item: Contains Wikidata URIs for the entities.
    • itemLabel: Labels or names of the entities.
    • itemDescription: Descriptions of the entities.
    • status: Provides information on the entity's status (e.g., related to Holocaust restitution cases or flagged as red flags).
    • altNames: Alternative names for the entities; this column has some missing values (449 non-null out of 745).
    • GND: German National Library identifiers; partially populated (423 non-null).
    • Proveana: Proveana-related identifiers; partially populated (132 non-null).
    • VIAF: Virtual International Authority File identifiers; partially populated (488 non-null).
    • LCCN: Library of Congress Control Numbers; partially populated (302 non-null).
    • RunDate: The date when the data was run/compiled.

Jan 24, 2025

More Names of Concern: art galleries, museums and auction houses

 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.

Jan 15, 2025

Museum Collections and Names of Concern in Provenance

The following names are linked to Holocaust art and restitution cases stemming from the persecution of Jews in the Nazi era. Their presence in a provenance is a Flag that requires serious verification. (For art galleries, see "More Names of Concern".

Jan 9, 2025

Wikidata Queries and AI LLMs: better dataviz with ChatGPT4O

Paintings owned by family and business connections to Presidents of the Swiss Art Dealers Association





The above graph, generated by a Wikidata query, can be made easier to understand with help from AI.

Steps:

1. Run Wikidata query: 

Short link to Wikidata Query: 

https://w.wiki/Cdse

2. Download  CSV from Wikidata Query 











3.  Upload into ChatGPT4o with the following prompt:

"please graph - pay attention to edges"




Here is a graph representing the relationships between Swiss Art Dealer Association Presidents, their business or family connections, and associated paintings. The edges are labeled to indicate the type of connection, and node colors differentiate between SwissArtpres (blue), connections (green), and paintings (orange). Let me know if you'd like further adjustments



chatGPT40 : "Here is the updated graph with adjusted label positions to minimize overlap. Labels are placed with a background for clarity, and the spacing between nodes has been increased to make the connections easier to read. Let me know if you need further refinements! "



Dec 31, 2024

Morton D. May, itineraries of selected artworks





(Above) Sankey of Provenance of The Little Mountain Goats

--

(Below) Interactive Sankey for several artworks

  • The Little Mountain Goats
  • Pitcher and Fruit Bowl
  • View from the Window
  • Artillerymen in the Shower
  • Spring
  • The Dream
data extracted by ChatGPT4o
(note that the itinerary for Artillerymen does not include the earlier provenance)

Dec 24, 2024

Erroneous provenance graph with links to source documents

AIC names extracted from Provenances (artworks by so called "degenerate" artists)

Names extracted from the provenance texts of artworks in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago who were created by artists whom the Nazis labelled "degenerate"



or


See DATASET with provenances HERE

Dec 23, 2024

Provenances for Modern Art at the AIC (selected artists)

Provenances published by the Art Institute of Chicago for artists persecuted as "degenerate" by the Nazis

(data from November 2024)

Dec 6, 2024

Analysing provenance gaps with CHATGPT4O


Can LLM Chatbots automate the analysis of provenance texts in order to detect potentially problematic provenances for the Nazi-era?

In this post we ask ChatGPT4O to "help us to look for gaps in the provenance (Provenance)?"

Dec 2, 2024

Revisiting restitution claims in the news: 2014 Egon Schiele watercolor Tote Stadt III (1911)


2014

 'The Leopold Museum, which holds the piece in its collection, has vehemently defended against the accusations. It maintains that a provenance investigation conducted jointly with the Austrian Culture Ministry in 2010 proved that the painting was sold after the end of World War II by Mathilde Lukacs, Grünbaum’s sister in law, to the Swiss art dealer Eberhard W. Kornfeld. Provenance researcher Dr. Sonja Niederacher subsequently concluded that there was no case for restitution. To further deter the Grünbaums, the Vienna institution has now gone on the offensive, stating that it “reserves the right to take legal action” against the heirs if they continue to claim that they are the rightful owners of Tote Stadt III. '


- "Leopold Museum Defends Against Restitution Claims" by Henri Neuendorf  date: November 5, 2014, ArtNet 


Nov 21, 2024

Nazi seized "degenerate" art in collection of Oberlin Allen Memorial Art Museum




The Allen Memorial Art Museum makes no secret of the fact that a Kirchner in its collection, Self Portrait as a Solder, once hung in a German museum.

 https://allenartcollection.oberlin.edu/objects/3758/selfportrait-as-a-soldier

The same painting can be found in the "Entartete Kunst" database published by the Free University of Berlin.

http://emuseum.campus.fu-berlin.de/eMuseumPlus?service=ExternalInterface&module=collection&objectId=117555&viewType=detailView

American museums have relatively little issue with recounting the history of artworks that the Nazi government seized from its own (Nazi-run) museums. 

Of Kirchner's Self Portrait of a Solder above, the Allen Memorial Art Museum writes: 

This work, with its raw and garish colors, was included in the 1937 Entartete Kunst-Degenerate Art-exhibition put on by the Nazi authorities in Munich, after which it traveled to other cities in Germany in 1937-38. In Munich, the painting was exhibited in room 3, with other Kirchners, as "Soldier with Whore," under the texts "Deliberate sabotage of national defense" and "An insult to the German heroes of the Great War," 

This text is in a descriptive essay, under the title, "More information".  The online entree for the artwork does not include a provenance tab.* Thus, while one learns that the Kirchner was "Degenerate Art", one does not learn how this art came to reside in an American museum, or that the artwork passed through a Nazi named Kurt Feldhäusser.*


***

Kurt Feldhäusser is a name that Nazi-looted art provenance researchers should be familiar with. In the above provenance for a Kirchner painting at the Oberlin Allen Memorial Art Museum, his name appears after the arttwork was seized from a German museum by the Nazi government in order to be sold to raise cash for the Third Reich.

This same Feldhäusser appears in numerous provenances of artworks looted from Jews that made their way to American museums.

Some restitution cases for artworks that passed through Kurt Feldhäusser include:

  • Artillerymen in the Shower (Kirchner) which had been owned by Alfred Flechtheim and which had been given a false provenance, restituted after litigation by the Guggenheim which had acquired it from the MoMA
  • Over Vitebsk (Chagall) which (also) had been owned by Alfred Flechtheim and which also had been given a false provenance, restituted secretly by the MoMa to the Matthiesen heirs in exchange for a $4 million payment, after initially refusing restitution on the grounds that repayment of a debt and not Nazis had been involved ("MoMA, in its records on its website, said the gallery had turned over the Chagall painting to a major German bank in 1934 “in exchange for debt"- NYT)
  • Sand Hills (Kirchner) which had been owned by Max Fischer and which had been given (sigh) a false provenance, restituted by the MoMa after the museum had initially refused mistakenly confusing the painting with another that had been seized from a German museum due to a sequence of errors


One notes in passing that all three of these artworks passed through both Feldhäusser and the Museum of Modern Art in New York and that all three had false provenances. 

Feldhäusser is a name that is hard to confuse with any other. Feldhäusser was a Nazi Party member. Feldhäusser is linked to both art seized from museums in the Nazi  "Degenerate Art" campaign of 1937-8 and looted from German Jews starting in 1933.

It would be interesting to compare and contrast, for the same artists, the historical treatment of the ownership history depending on whether the artwork was part of the "Degenerate Art" inventory of art seized from German museums or simply looted from Jews.




*The Allen Memorial Art Museum does not publish Nazi-era provenance for the artworks in its online collection with the exception of 30 artworks that were published in a slide show under "Provenance Research Nazi Era". One can find the Kirchner there. (see internet archive https://web.archive.org/web/20210813054133/https://amam.oberlin.edu/art/provenance-research/nazi-era



For more on Kurt Feldhäusser see:

Kurt Feldhäusser or Weyhe in provenance of artworks in American museums



Nov 12, 2024

Part II: Tracking the Munich connections, ideas from ChatGPT

In "The Munich Connection" we listed artworks that American museums published on the Nazi Era Provenance Internet Portal whose provenance contained the word "Munich".

How to go from there to a map of the WWII and postwar art dealing networks? There is a lot of data and it is held in different places for different purposes. How not to get lost in it all

In this day of LLMs, it seemed reasonable to see if ChatGPT had any advice.

Prompt:

You are an art detective. You know the names of ten dealers based in Munich who were guilty of trading in Nazi looted art. What you’d like to find out is the names of the intermediaries they used postwar to launder looted artworks and sell them to American museums. You can obtain provenance from museums, from looted art databases and from restitution cases. You have access to a knowledge graph that can tell you who people are. Please suggest a plan.