The US returns works stolen by Nazis valued at $2.5 million

The US returns works stolen by Nazis valued at .5 million

Authorities in USA announced that two drawings stolen by the Nazi regimevalued at US$2.5 million and that ended up exposed in American museumswill be returned to relatives of Fritz Grunbauman Austrian Jewish cabaret performer who died in the Holocaust.

This new return follows the return last year of seven works of art stolen from Grunbaum in 1938sold by the Nazis for finance your war machineThe AFP agency reported last night.

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Courtesy: IATI Seguros

One of the works, “Woman with Black Hair,” was held by the Allen Museum of Art at Oberlin College and valued at about $1.5 million, while the “Portrait of a Man” remained in the collection of the Museum of Art. Carnegie art and is valued at approximately one million dollars.

Both drawings are by Egon Schiele, an Austrian expressionist artist.

“This is a victory for justice and for the memory of a brave artist, art collector and opponent of fascism,” said Timothy Reif, a judge and relative of Grunbaum, who died in the Dachau concentration camp near the city. German from Munich.

“As Fritz Grunbaum’s heirs, we are grateful that this man who fought for what was right in his own time continues to make the world more just, decades after his tragic death,” they added.

In addition to the seven works recovered last year and the two pieces that will be returned now, another work was given to the family, without conditions, by a collector.

“The fact that we were able to return ten pieces that were stolen by the Nazis speaks to the tenacious advocacy of the family members to ensure that these beautiful works of art could finally return home,” said Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Grunbaum was a critic of the Nazis and owned hundreds of works of art, including more than 80 made by Schiele, whose work was considered “degenerate” by the regime.

Arrested by the Nazis in 1938, Grunbaum was forced to cede his power of attorney to his spouse, who in turn was forced to hand over the family’s entire art collection and then be deported to another concentration camp in what is now Belarus. .

Source: Ambito

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