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Established in 1996 |
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Wednesday, November 13, 2024 |
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German government says Pissarro painting from Cornelius Gurlitt trove to be returned |
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Task force employee Lukas Baecher looks up artworks in Berlin on December 4, 2014. The task force investigating the provenance of priceless paintings found in a Nazi-era art hoard said on December 12, 2014 it had received more than 200 queries about specific works by possible heirs. The 14-member international task force was established a year ago to sort through the spectacular trove hidden for decades by Cornelius Gurlitt, son of a powerful art dealer during the Third Reich. AFP PHOTO / DPA / BRITTA PEDERSEN.
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BERLIN (AFP).- Germany said Wednesday experts had established a Camille Pissarro painting from the Cornelius Gurlitt art trove was looted by the Nazis and should be returned to the heirs of its rightful owners.
The oil painting from 1902 entitled "La Seine vue du Pont-Neuf, au fond le Louvre" (The Seine seen from the Pont Neuf) is "absolutely certain" to have been looted by Hitler's regime, the German culture ministry said.
"For the restitution, we are already in contact with the heiress of the former owner," Culture Minister Monika Gruetters said in a statement, without identifying the family.
Gurlitt, who died in May aged 81, had hoarded more than 1,000 paintings, drawings and sketches, including masterpieces by the likes of Picasso and Chagall, in his Munich flat for decades.
The Pissarro piece was discovered among more works uncovered at his Salzburg, Austria home.
The artworks were acquired by his powerful father Hildebrand Gurlitt who was tasked by the Nazis with selling artwork stolen from Jewish families in the 1930s and 1940s.
Research by a German government-appointed task force has already established that the artworks "Seated Woman" by Henri Matisse and "Two Riders on the Beach", painted by Max Liebermann, should be returned to the heirs of their rightful owners.
The Museum of Fine Arts in Bern, Switzerland, agreed in November to accept the controversial art trove left behind by Cornelius Gurlitt.
It agreed as part of an accord with the German government over the inheritance that it would return any works found to have been stolen by the Nazis.
© 1994-2015 Agence France-Presse
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