Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
The Italian Master Cartice, stolen by the Nazis from the Jewish art dealer in Amsterdam, was noticed on the real estate agent website, which sells the house in Argentina, more than 80 years after its adoption.
The photo shows a portrait of the Lady of Giuseppe Gisandy, hanging over the sofa inside the property near Buenos -Aires, who once belonged to the senior Nazi official who moved to South America after the Second World War.
A picture What are the features in the database of lost military artIt is traced when the house was put up for sale by the daughter of an official newspaper.
The works of art are one of the hundreds of art -loot arts, Jacques Gaudstker, who helped other Jews escape during the war.
Hudstker died in the sea as a result of the accident, avoiding the Netherlands and buried in England.
More than 1,100 works from the hourly collection were bought out in forced sale by the senior Nazis after his death, including Reichs Marshal Herman Giring.
The post -war postwar post -war in Germany was restored and exhibited at the Rijkmuseum Amsterdam as part of the Dutch National Collection. In 2006 in 2006 in 2006, AD reports.
But one picture, a portrait of “Conto-Kolean” of the late Baroque-portraitist Giuseppe Gisandy, remained missing.
Investigation of the ad The said wartime documents, which suggest that he was in the possession of Friedrich Kadgiene, SS officer and senior financial assistant Goring, who fled to Switzerland in 1945 before moving to Brazil, and then Argentina, where he became a successful businessman.
Kadgiene – described as a “snake of the lowest like” by American interrogations – died in 1979. The American file, noticed by AD, also said that the Kadgiene notes have turned on the line “appears to have significant assets, it can still be useful to us.”
The document states that this has been attempted to talk to the two daughters of the Nazis in Buenos -Aires about his father and disappeared works for several years.
But journalists had a success when one of Kadgin’s daughters put a house that once belonged to a father sold with a real estate agent specializing in expensive Argentine property.
“There is no reason to think that it can be a copy,” said Anelis Kul and Perry Sriy of the Netherlands Cultural Heritage Agency (RCE) who considered the images for AD.
Another looted artistic work – the flower still life of the Dutch painter of the 17th century Abraham Minion – was also noticed in one of the social media, reports AD.
According to AD, all attempts to talk to the sisters, because the photo was noticed, failed, and one talked about the document: “I do not know what information you want from me and I do not know what picture you are talking about.”
The lawyers on the Hitstikuker estate said they would make every effort to return the picture.
“My family seeks to return every artistic work robbed from the Jacque collection and restore the heritage,” said von Saher.