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Robles Casas & CamposAn Italian master painting, stolen by the Nazis by a Jewish art trader in Amsterdam, was spotted on a real estate agent website selling a house in Argentina more than 80 years after it was taken.
A photo shows a portrait of a lady from Giuseppe Ghislandi hanging over a sofa inside a property near Buenos Aires, once owned by a senior Nazi employee who moved to South America after World War II.
The picture, Which features in a database of lost military artIt was traced when the house was released for sale by the daughter of the official, according to the advertisement of the Dutch newspaper.
The work of art is among the hundreds, plundered by the artist Jacques Goodesticker, who helped other Jews escape during the war.
GoudStikker died in the sea in an incident, escaped from the Netherlands and was buried in England.
More than 1,100 works from the GoudStikker collection have been redeemed in a forced sale by senior Nazis after his death, including Reich Marchol Herman Goring.
Post -war, some of the works were restored in Germany and displayed in the Amsterdam Reykmuseum as part of the Dutch national collection. Goudtistikker’s only successor, daughter -in -law, Marei Von Sicher, conquered 202 songs in 2006, AD reports.
But a picture, a portrait of Contessa Colleoni, from the later-baroque portraitist Giuseppe Ghislandi, has disappeared so far.
An investigation of AD Opened military documents suggest that he is in the possession of Friedrich Kadgien, an employee of the SS and the senior Goring financial assistant who fled to Switzerland in 1945, before moving to Brazil, then Argentina, where he became a successful businessman.
Kadgien – described as a “snake of the largest species” of American interrogators – died in 1979. The US dossier observed by AD also said that Kadgien notes includes the line “seems to have significant assets, it can still be beneficial to us”.
The document said he had tried for several years to talk to the two daughters of the late Nazi in Buenos Aires about their father and the missing works of art, but to no avail.
But the reporters were lucky when one of Kadgien’s daughters put the home, once owned by her father, for sale with a real estate agent specializing in an expensive Argentine property.
“There is no reason to think that this can be a copy,” said Aneli Cole and Perry Srier of the Netherlands Cultural Heritage Agency (RCE) who reviewed the images for AD.
Another plundered work of art – floral still life by Dutch 17th -century artist Abraham Miner – has also been spotted in one of the sister’s social media, AD reports.
All attempts to talk to the sisters, as the photo is noticed, they have failed, according to AD, as one says on the paper: “I do not know what information you want from me and I do not know what picture you are talking about.”
GoudStikker’s lawyers said they would make every effort to restore the picture.
“My family is intended to return any work of art robbed by Jacques’ collection and to restore his inheritance,” said von Sahar.