Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The painting has belonged to Spitzweg's nephew-in-law Major Karl Loreck, Hugo Helbing in Munich, E. Ullmann in Vienna, H. Meyer in Munich (from October 1937) and H. E. Martini in Augsburg (from 1951). On 5 April 2008 it was sold at auction for 69,600 euro. [3] Since the 1950s, it has also gone under the name Gnomen (English: Gnomes). This was ...
At present, the German Lost Art Foundation registers more than 680 artworks that mention Lempertz. [17] [18] [19] In 1977, and again in 1996, Lempertz sold art that it had previously sold in 1937, [20] without mentioning that, under the Nazis, it had been subject to a forced sale from the collection of Max Stern. [21] [22] [23] [24]
In 2021, the Bavarian State Paintings Collections refused to allow Germany's national tribunal that reviews claims of art lost in the Nazi era to review the case of Picasso's Madame Soler, which the family of Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy had claimed. "It is simply inexplicable that the state should refuse to use a mediation mechanism it ...
After Gurlitt's death the painting was offered for sale by both his widow (unsuccessfully) and subsequently by his son Cornelius, when at auction by Ketterer in Stuttgart in 1972 it realised DM 90,000 to Cornelius after auctioneer's fees (the same painting later re-sold at Sotheby's in London for £1.2 million). Beckmann's family did not ...
Four art dealers were authorized to sell degenerate art by Germany: Karl Buchholtz and Ferdinand Möller from Berlin, Bernhard A. Böhmer from Güstrow and Hildebrand Gurlitt from Hamburg. [3] The German Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda discussed opportunities how to place the works on the international market and the idea of an ...
In 2001, the artists Mendi and Keith Obadike listed Keith's "blackness" for sale on eBay under the "Black Americana" category as part of an art project, "Blackness for Sale." [42] [43] [44] The act was seen as a comment on the commodification of racial identity [45] and as a reference to slave auctions. [46] The auction was eventually shut down ...
The same painting would reach at Sotheby's in London the equivalent of €4.5 million in a later auction in 2007. [3] In 1997, another oil painting of Bauernfeind, The Port of Jaffa , was sold at the Van Ham Kunstauktionen in Cologne for 1,510,000 DM , thus becoming the most expensive 19th-century painting ever sold in Germany.
This is a list of German painters This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .