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The prosecutor, who was stolen by the Nazis, was noticed in the advertising of the Argentine real estate agent, the prosecutor said after the raid.
Portrait of the lady In Giuseppe Gisuandi, he was presented to hang over the sofa inside the property near Buenos -Aires, which was sold by the daughter of a senior Nazis, who escaped from Germany after World War II.
However, this week a police raid on the house did not appear in the picture – but two weapons were confiscated, said local media prosecutor Carlos Martinez.
Mr. Martinez said Argentine Daily Clarin views this as a supposedly cover smuggling.
The newspaper reported that the furniture was rebuilt and the picture was missing from the wall when they were searched.
Peter Shutten from the Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad, who first reported the appearance of a long -lost work of art, stated that there was a data: “The picture was removed shortly or after reporting on the media about it.”
“Now there is a big rug with horses and some natural scenes, which the police say it seems that it was used there.”
The portrait of the lady was among the collection of Amsterdam art dealer Jacques Gaudstker, most of which was forcibly sold by the Nazis after his death.
Some works were restored in Germany after the war and exhibited at the Amsterdam exhibition as part of the Dutch National Collection.
For over 80 years, the location of the Italian portraitist-late baroque Giuseppe Gisandi has been unknown.
The study of AD discovered the war -time documents, which believed that the picture was in the possession of Friedrich Kadgiene, SS officer and senior financial assistant Herman Ging, who fled in 1945, eventually moved to Argentina, where he became a successful businessman.
Cadgiene died in 1979, but in the US, which entered the AD, the line is included: “It seems to have significant assets, it can still be valuable to us.”
The document adds that for many years he has made several attempts to talk to his two daughters in Buenos -Aires, but to no avail.
And only when one of Kadgin’s daughters put the house for sale, did they have made any progress in finding the missing work.
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.
After the photo appeared, one of the sisters told Dutch paper that they did not know what they wanted from her, and what painting they were saying.
The lawyers on the Hitstikuker estate said they would make every effort to return the picture.
His only that displaced the heir, daughter -in -law Marey von Saher said that her family “aims to return every artistic work robbed from the Jacque collection and restore the heritage.”
According to AD, in 2006, she captured 202 works.