Painting Looted By Nazis Returned To Owner

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Portrait of a Seated Young Woman
Officials have returned a painting looted by the Nazis to heirs of a Jewish French politician and resistance figure who was executed during World War II.
 
In August 2019 Associated Press reported officials have returned a painting looted by the Nazis to heirs of a Jewish French politician and resistance figure who was executed during World War II.
 
The painting - Portrait of a Seated Young Woman by Thomas Couture, which belonged to Georges Mandel, was discovered in late collector Cornelius Gurlitt's art trove while German authorities were investigating a tax case in 2012.
 
The reclusive Bavarian collector inherited the 1,500-piece collection from his father, Hildebrand Gurlitt, an art dealer who traded in works confiscated by the Nazis. Many are thought to have been looted from their original Jewish owners, but provenance research has been slow and only a handful has been restituted.
 
Culture Minister Monika Gruetters pledged at Tuesday’s handover to Mandel’s relatives to do everything possible to return stolen art to rightful owners.
 
 Portrait of a Seated Young Woman
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thomas Couture, ‘Portrait of a Seated Young Woman,’ 1850-1855). This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art.
 

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