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For sale: the art the Nazis stole

On July 4, there will be an unusual number of restituted art from the Holocaust coming up for auction

June 22, 2018 15:19
Antwerp Master circa 1515-20, and Joachim Patinir, Triptych 9Q8RQ
6 min read

Sometimes, it’s an inscription or a label on the back or base of a work of art. Sometimes, just a mark will do.

Richard Aronowitz works in the art world but his job is more like that of a detective. As Sotheby’s European Head of Restitution, he combs through every pre-1945 lot that comes to auction for sale — be it a painting, a work on paper, a bronze sculpture or a medieval cup — looking for proof that the work can be legitimately sold.

“Sometimes, we see an alarming name, either a Jewish collector’s or an auctioneer in Berlin who sold off looted art, or a dealer who dealt with looted art, or such “red-flag” names as Dr Voss, who acquired works of art for Hitler.

“We then have to look very carefully into what happened to this particular piece before allowing it into a sale,” he tells me. Sotheby’s was the first major art house to establish a restitution department.