14 November 2013

Lost and found


Time has an article about those recently-discovered paintings:
In the winter of 2012, police in Munich raided the home of Cornelius Gurlitt, the reclusive, octogenarian son of a deceased art dealer who had sold works of art for the Nazis during World War Two. The German authorities were investigating Gurlitt for suspected tax evasion. In darkened rooms, stuffed among tins of food and piles of junk, they found more than fourteen hundred works by some of Europe’s masters. Many of the paintings and drawings are believed to have been looted by the Nazis from Jewish collectors and families, or forcibly purchased as knock-down prices, and there are myriad questions about what to do next.
But one thing is clear: the European art world will never be the same. The collection contains works of art that had been recorded as lost and pieces by masters such as Marc Chagall (photo above, left), Henri Matisse (photo above, right), and Otto Dix that art historians never knew existed.
Here are slides of some of the newly discovered pieces, which for decades have remained hidden from the world.
Rico says some things will never cease to amaze...

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