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Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

The Gemäldegalerie (German pronunciation: [ɡəˈmɛːldəɡaləˌʁiː], Painting Gallery) is an art museum in Berlin, Germany, and the museum where the main selection of paintings belonging to the Berlin State Museums (Staatliche Museen zu Berlin) is displayed. It was first opened in 1830, and the current building was completed in 1998. It is located in the Kulturforum museum district west of Potsdamer Platz.

Gemäldegalerie
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
Interactive fullscreen map
LocationBerlin, Germany
Coordinates52°30′31.0″N 13°21′52.9″E / 52.508611°N 13.364694°E / 52.508611; 13.364694Coordinates: 52°30′31.0″N 13°21′52.9″E / 52.508611°N 13.364694°E / 52.508611; 13.364694

It holds one of the world's leading collections of European paintings from the 13th to the 18th centuries. Its collection includes masterpieces from such artists as Albrecht Dürer, Lucas Cranach, Hans Holbein, Rogier van der Weyden, Jan van Eyck, Raphael, Botticelli, Titian, Caravaggio, Peter Paul Rubens, David Teniers the Younger, Rembrandt, Johannes Vermeer, Thomas Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds and Antonio Viviani.

Collection

 
Amor Victorious (1602–1603). Oil on canvas. 156 x 113 cm. Caravaggio shows Eros prevailing over other human endeavors: war, music, science, government.

The Gemäldegalerie prides itself on its scientific methodology in collecting and displaying art. Each room can be taken in as a single statement about one to five artists in a certain period or following a certain style. The German collection is the finest and most comprehensive in the world, rivaled only by Vienna and Munich, and the Early Netherlandish and Italian collections are also exceptionally comprehensive. The holdings of Spanish, French, and British art are much smaller. Especially notable rooms include the octagonal Rembrandt room and a room containing five different Madonnas by Raphael.

There are two paintings by Vermeer in the collection, The Wine Glass and Woman with a Pearl Necklace.

Other notable experiences include Flemish moralistic paintings which stretch across the north side of the museum, showing an interplay between the religious motives of the artists' patrons and the often sensual inspirations of the artists. In the Renaissance section, for example, Caravaggio's Amor Victorious is displayed alongside Giovanni Baglione's Sacred Love Versus Profane Love. The two paintings are historically connected; after hearing of the scandalous portrayal of the theme "love conquers all" in Caravaggio's work, a Roman bishop commissioned Baglione's reply, which mimics Carvaggio's style, including the features of Amor.

Building

 
 
Christ carrying the cross, Pieter Brueghel the Elder

The current gallery sits in the southwest corner of the Kulturforum, a modern-styled answer to the old Museumsinsel (Museum Island). The gallery was designed by Munich architects Heinz Hilmer and Christoph Sattler. The building consists of 72 rooms providing a two-kilometer (1.25 mi) floor. Upstairs the rooms flow around a large central hall, described by the museum as a "meditation hall". The hall sometimes displays sculpture, but is mostly empty, allowing easy crossing between rooms, and somewhere for school parties to sit.[1] There are also works downstairs, a gallery devoted to frames, and a digital gallery.

The collection is arranged more or less chronologically starting from the entrance and moving toward the farthest room; however there are many doors back to the long central space, so it is straightforward to reach any other room at any point. The visitor chooses between southern, mainly Italian, art to the left, and German and Flemish art to the right. Completing the circuit takes the visitor first forward, then backward, in time. The numbering system starting on the north side of the museum covers mostly Northern European art, then British art. A visitor following along the southern side will go through mostly Italian and Southern European art. The main floor galleries contain some 850 works in 53 rooms, with around 400 more in several rooms off a corridor downstairs, which are also open to visitors.[2]

Aborted relocation

In 2012, the gallery's collection faced a pending move to a temporary site on Berlin's Museumsinsel, to make room for the expansion of the Neue Nationalgalerie and the 20th-century collection of Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch, bequeathed on condition that it be displayed in its entirety. The proposal has provoked controversy and criticism, particularly since there are no permanent plans for a new structure that would house the collection in its full scope.[3][4][5][6]

The plan to move the collection was later scrapped following the public backlash and financial considerations regarding the new buildings. The paintings will remain in their current location.[7]

History

Unlike most major national European collections (with the exception of the National Gallery, London), the Gemäldegalerie collection is not essentially formed around the former dynastic royal collection, but created by a process of acquisition by the Prussian government beginning in 1815. From the first the museum was intended to reflect the full range of European art, giving a different emphasis from that of older royal collections, including the royal collection of Saxony, now mostly in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, the finest German princely collection, which like other royal collections is strongest in Italian art.[8]

 
Company at a Meal by David Teniers the Younger.

The collection was first opened to the public in 1830, on completion of construction of the Royal Museum, now called the Altes Museum ("Old Museum"), designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel and sited by the Lustgarten opposite the Royal Palace on the other side of Unter den Linden. The paintings occupied the upper floor with the collection of antiquities on the lower. At this point, the collection contained nearly 1200 paintings, with a core of 160 from the 17th-century collection of Marchese Vincenzo Giustiniani, bought in Paris in 1815. An even more important purchase was 677 paintings from the collection formed in Berlin by the English merchant Edward Solly, which were acquired in 1821; Solly was an early collector of Italian Trecento and Quattrocento paintings and Early Netherlandish painting.[9] Purchases continued throughout the 19th century, with 345 works acquired during the inaugural directorship of Gustav Friedrich Waagen from 1830–1868, though paintings competed with antiquities for rather reduced purchasing budgets.[10]

After Berlin became the capital of the new German Empire in 1871 the funds available greatly increased, and purchases accelerated, as Berlin strove to catch up with the greatest European collections. In 1874 the collection acquired the best of the collection of mostly north European art formed by the industrialist Barthold Suermondt of Aachen after his business collapsed. This was handled for the museum by the art historian Wilhelm von Bode, who had joined in 1872, and was to be the Berlin Museums' greatest Director. He headed the sculpture collections from 1883, then the paintings from 1890, becoming general head of the Berlin Museums from 1890 to 1920. A specialist in Rembrandt and Dutch painting, he made very significant additions in those areas but did not neglect Italian painting. His leadership marked the rise of the Gemäldegalerie to international prominence.[11]

In 1904 the Gemäldegalerie moved to the newly built Kaiser Friedrich Museum, now the Bode Museum, where the collection continued to expand. The museum was badly damaged during World War II, but most of the collection survived the war in shelters across Germany. At the end of the war, however, 400 works that were regarded as too large to take to the remoter hiding places were destroyed in a fire in a Flak tower that served as a bomb shelter. Many important altarpieces and other large works were lost, and the collection remains short of very large works compared to the other major European collections. Furthermore, several hundred paintings were looted by Russian or American soldiers or confiscated by the Red Army and never returned,[12] although in June 2006 a small painting by Alessandro Allori, missing since 1944, was returned by the British journalist Charles Wheeler, who had picked it up at the end of the war in Berlin.[13] The surviving collection was divided between East Berlin (mostly at the Bode Museum on Museumsinsel) and West Berlin in Berlin-Dahlem, where from the 1950s they were housed in a building originally used for the Asiatic collections, built in 1923, with post-war additions.[14]

Purchases for the West Berlin collection eventually resumed after the war, with Dutch Golden Age painting, Italian Baroque painting, and the creation of a small section for English painting being priorities for successive directors before the Re-unification of Germany. In 1992 the museum administrations of East and West were re-united, but uniting the collections physically took longer. The current building on the Kulturforum was completed in 1998, and displays some 1,250 paintings, although yet another move currently seems likely (see below). Other works are displayed elsewhere, as the museum forms part of the Berlin State Museums and does not own a distinct collection as most museums do. For example, L'Enseigne de Gersaint, or "Gersaint's Shopsign", (1720), a famous painting by Jean-Antoine Watteau, is displayed with other works in the appropriate setting of Charlottenburg Palace. The whole collection of Old Master Western paintings in the Berlin State Museums is usually said to be around 3,000.[15]

In 1999 the Gemäldegalerie restituted to the heirs of the Jewish art collector Federico Gentili di Giuseppe a painting by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, entitled Rinaldo Abandoning Armida. Gentili di Giuseppe's art collection had been plundered by Nazis and disposed of via a series of Paris sales in 1942; the Gemäldegaleriehad acquired from the French art dealer Cailleux, in 1979.[16]

In 2019, Berlin's Gemäldegalerie (Old Master Gallery) returned two late medieval panels to the heirs of a famous Jewish art collector Harry Fuld Senior who had been looted by Nazis. In 1940 the panels by the Italian artist Giovanni di Paolo, The Clothing of St. Clare By St. Francis, and St. Clare Rescuing the Shipwrecked, (c 1455), were acquired via the art dealer Carl Bümming by what was then called the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum.[17]

In 2020 Berlin's Gemäldegalerie restituted a 16th-century painting by Hans Baldung Grien to the heirs of Hans Purrmann was forced to sell the work from his collection after losing his livelihood due to Nazi persecution.[18]

Directors

 
One of the rooms with German medieval religious paintings

West-Berlin:

    • Ernst Heinrich Zimmermann, since 1957
    • Cornelius Müller Hofstede (1898–1974), 1957 until 1964
    • Robert Oertel (1907–1981), 1964 until 1973
    • Henning Bock (* 1931), 1973 until 1990

East-Berlin:

  • Ludwig Justi (1876–1957), 1946 until 1957
  • Hans Werner Grohn (1929–2009), 1957 until 1960
  • Irene Geismeier, 1960 until 1990

After Reunion 1990

    • Henning Bock, 1990 until 1996
    • Jan Kelch (1939–2017), 1996 until 2004
    • Bernd Wolfgang Lindemann [de] (* 1951), 2004 until 2016
    • Michael Eissenhauer (* 1956), 2016 until 2021
    • Dagmar Hirschfelder (* 1973), since 2021

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Prestel, 10–12
  2. ^ Prestel, 10–12
  3. ^ Connolly, Kate (12 July 2012). "Berlin plan for Old Masters to give way to modern art angers historians". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  4. ^ "Old Masters face eviction from Berlin gallery". The Guardian. 12 July 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  5. ^ Walde, Gabriele (6 July 2012). "Wir lassen uns nicht auf Meisterwerke reduzieren". Die Zeit (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  6. ^ Rauterberg, Hanno (9 July 2012). "Rettet die Gemäldegalerie!". Die Zeit (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2012.
  7. ^ Kuhn, Nicola (22 August 2013). "Die Alten Meister bleiben in der Gemäldegalerie" [The old masters stay in the Gemäldegalerie]. Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  8. ^ Prestel, 4–5
  9. ^ Prestel, 4–6. The King bought some 3,000 works from Solly with his own money, allowing Waagen to take his pick.
  10. ^ Prestel, 6–7
  11. ^ Prestel, 7–8
  12. ^ Prestel, 8–9
  13. ^ Harding, Luke. "Renaissance woman returned to gallery". The Guardian, 1 June 2006. Retrieved on 12 October 2007.
  14. ^ Prestel, 8–10
  15. ^ Prestel, 10–11; see 2012 press references below for the 3,000 figures.
  16. ^ "Looted by the Nazis, a Romanino is Returned". lootedart.com. from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Germany Returns Two Nazi-Confiscated Old Masters to the Heirs of a Renowned Jewish Art Collector". lootedart.com. Artnet. from the original on 24 June 2020. Retrieved 30 April 2021. Germany has returned two late medieval panels to the heirs of a famous Jewish art collector. The religious paintings, which were in Berlin's Gemäldegalerie (Old Master Gallery), originally formed part of the remarkable art collection of the Jewish businessman Harry Fuld Senior. They are the latest pieces of Nazi-looted art to have been successfully recovered by his heirs, although hundreds of items remain missing. The panels by the Italian artist Giovanni di Paolo depict two scenes of the life of St. Clare of Assisi. The Clothing of St. Clare By St. Francis, and St. Clare Rescuing the Shipwrecked. Both date from around 1455.
  18. ^ "Berlin restitutes painting to heirs of 'degenerate' artist for the first time". lootedart.com. The Art Newspaper. from the original on 24 June 2020. Retrieved 30 April 2021. Berlin's Gemäldegalerie has restituted a 16th-century painting by Hans Baldung Grien to the heirs of Hans Purrmann, a friend of Henri Matisse who was persecuted by the Nazis as a "degenerate" artist and was forced to sell the work from his collection after losing his livelihood.

References

  • "Prestel": Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, Prestel Museum Guide, 1998, Prestel Verlag, ISBN 3791319124
  • Marco Bussagli, Dresda, I Dipinti Della Gemäldegalerie, Bologna, Scripta Maneant, 2014, ISBN 978-88-7057-257-5

External links

  • Official website
  • Association of the friends of the Gemäldegalerie
  • www.kulturforum-berlin.com Information about all cultural institutions at the "Kulturforum" in Berlin
  • Virtual tour of the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin provided by Google Arts & Culture
  •   Media related to Gemäldegalerie (Berlin) at Wikimedia Commons

gemäldegalerie, berlin, gemäldegalerie, german, pronunciation, ɡəˈmɛːldəɡaləˌʁiː, painting, gallery, museum, berlin, germany, museum, where, main, selection, paintings, belonging, berlin, state, museums, staatliche, museen, berlin, displayed, first, opened, 18. The Gemaldegalerie German pronunciation ɡeˈmɛːldeɡaleˌʁiː Painting Gallery is an art museum in Berlin Germany and the museum where the main selection of paintings belonging to the Berlin State Museums Staatliche Museen zu Berlin is displayed It was first opened in 1830 and the current building was completed in 1998 It is located in the Kulturforum museum district west of Potsdamer Platz GemaldegalerieGemaldegalerie BerlinInteractive fullscreen mapLocationBerlin GermanyCoordinates52 30 31 0 N 13 21 52 9 E 52 508611 N 13 364694 E 52 508611 13 364694 Coordinates 52 30 31 0 N 13 21 52 9 E 52 508611 N 13 364694 E 52 508611 13 364694This article is about a museum in Berlin For other museums with the same name see Gemaldegalerie disambiguation Portrait of a Young Girl c 1470 by Petrus Christus It holds one of the world s leading collections of European paintings from the 13th to the 18th centuries Its collection includes masterpieces from such artists as Albrecht Durer Lucas Cranach Hans Holbein Rogier van der Weyden Jan van Eyck Raphael Botticelli Titian Caravaggio Peter Paul Rubens David Teniers the Younger Rembrandt Johannes Vermeer Thomas Gainsborough Joshua Reynolds and Antonio Viviani Contents 1 Collection 2 Building 2 1 Aborted relocation 3 History 4 Directors 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksCollection Edit Amor Victorious 1602 1603 Oil on canvas 156 x 113 cm Caravaggio shows Eros prevailing over other human endeavors war music science government See also Category Paintings in the Gemaldegalerie Berlin The Gemaldegalerie prides itself on its scientific methodology in collecting and displaying art Each room can be taken in as a single statement about one to five artists in a certain period or following a certain style The German collection is the finest and most comprehensive in the world rivaled only by Vienna and Munich and the Early Netherlandish and Italian collections are also exceptionally comprehensive The holdings of Spanish French and British art are much smaller Especially notable rooms include the octagonal Rembrandt room and a room containing five different Madonnas by Raphael There are two paintings by Vermeer in the collection The Wine Glass andWoman with a Pearl Necklace Other notable experiences include Flemish moralistic paintings which stretch across the north side of the museum showing an interplay between the religious motives of the artists patrons and the often sensual inspirations of the artists In the Renaissance section for example Caravaggio s Amor Victorious is displayed alongside Giovanni Baglione s Sacred Love Versus Profane Love The two paintings are historically connected after hearing of the scandalous portrayal of the theme love conquers all in Caravaggio s work a Roman bishop commissioned Baglione s reply which mimics Carvaggio s style including the features of Amor Building Edit Joseph s Dream Rembrandt c 1645 Christ carrying the cross Pieter Brueghel the Elder The current gallery sits in the southwest corner of the Kulturforum a modern styled answer to the old Museumsinsel Museum Island The gallery was designed by Munich architects Heinz Hilmer and Christoph Sattler The building consists of 72 rooms providing a two kilometer 1 25 mi floor Upstairs the rooms flow around a large central hall described by the museum as a meditation hall The hall sometimes displays sculpture but is mostly empty allowing easy crossing between rooms and somewhere for school parties to sit 1 There are also works downstairs a gallery devoted to frames and a digital gallery The collection is arranged more or less chronologically starting from the entrance and moving toward the farthest room however there are many doors back to the long central space so it is straightforward to reach any other room at any point The visitor chooses between southern mainly Italian art to the left and German and Flemish art to the right Completing the circuit takes the visitor first forward then backward in time The numbering system starting on the north side of the museum covers mostly Northern European art then British art A visitor following along the southern side will go through mostly Italian and Southern European art The main floor galleries contain some 850 works in 53 rooms with around 400 more in several rooms off a corridor downstairs which are also open to visitors 2 Aborted relocation Edit In 2012 the gallery s collection faced a pending move to a temporary site on Berlin s Museumsinsel to make room for the expansion of the Neue Nationalgalerie and the 20th century collection of Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch bequeathed on condition that it be displayed in its entirety The proposal has provoked controversy and criticism particularly since there are no permanent plans for a new structure that would house the collection in its full scope 3 4 5 6 The plan to move the collection was later scrapped following the public backlash and financial considerations regarding the new buildings The paintings will remain in their current location 7 History EditUnlike most major national European collections with the exception of the National Gallery London the Gemaldegalerie collection is not essentially formed around the former dynastic royal collection but created by a process of acquisition by the Prussian government beginning in 1815 From the first the museum was intended to reflect the full range of European art giving a different emphasis from that of older royal collections including the royal collection of Saxony now mostly in the Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden the finest German princely collection which like other royal collections is strongest in Italian art 8 Company at a Meal by David Teniers the Younger The collection was first opened to the public in 1830 on completion of construction of the Royal Museum now called the Altes Museum Old Museum designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel and sited by the Lustgarten opposite the Royal Palace on the other side of Unter den Linden The paintings occupied the upper floor with the collection of antiquities on the lower At this point the collection contained nearly 1200 paintings with a core of 160 from the 17th century collection of Marchese Vincenzo Giustiniani bought in Paris in 1815 An even more important purchase was 677 paintings from the collection formed in Berlin by the English merchant Edward Solly which were acquired in 1821 Solly was an early collector of Italian Trecento and Quattrocento paintings and Early Netherlandish painting 9 Purchases continued throughout the 19th century with 345 works acquired during the inaugural directorship of Gustav Friedrich Waagen from 1830 1868 though paintings competed with antiquities for rather reduced purchasing budgets 10 Albrecht Durer Portrait of Jakob Muffel 1526 After Berlin became the capital of the new German Empire in 1871 the funds available greatly increased and purchases accelerated as Berlin strove to catch up with the greatest European collections In 1874 the collection acquired the best of the collection of mostly north European art formed by the industrialist Barthold Suermondt of Aachen after his business collapsed This was handled for the museum by the art historian Wilhelm von Bode who had joined in 1872 and was to be the Berlin Museums greatest Director He headed the sculpture collections from 1883 then the paintings from 1890 becoming general head of the Berlin Museums from 1890 to 1920 A specialist in Rembrandt and Dutch painting he made very significant additions in those areas but did not neglect Italian painting His leadership marked the rise of the Gemaldegalerie to international prominence 11 In 1904 the Gemaldegalerie moved to the newly built Kaiser Friedrich Museum now the Bode Museum where the collection continued to expand The museum was badly damaged during World War II but most of the collection survived the war in shelters across Germany At the end of the war however 400 works that were regarded as too large to take to the remoter hiding places were destroyed in a fire in a Flak tower that served as a bomb shelter Many important altarpieces and other large works were lost and the collection remains short of very large works compared to the other major European collections Furthermore several hundred paintings were looted by Russian or American soldiers or confiscated by the Red Army and never returned 12 although in June 2006 a small painting by Alessandro Allori missing since 1944 was returned by the British journalist Charles Wheeler who had picked it up at the end of the war in Berlin 13 The surviving collection was divided between East Berlin mostly at the Bode Museum on Museumsinsel and West Berlin in Berlin Dahlem where from the 1950s they were housed in a building originally used for the Asiatic collections built in 1923 with post war additions 14 Purchases for the West Berlin collection eventually resumed after the war with Dutch Golden Age painting Italian Baroque painting and the creation of a small section for English painting being priorities for successive directors before the Re unification of Germany In 1992 the museum administrations of East and West were re united but uniting the collections physically took longer The current building on the Kulturforum was completed in 1998 and displays some 1 250 paintings although yet another move currently seems likely see below Other works are displayed elsewhere as the museum forms part of the Berlin State Museums and does not own a distinct collection as most museums do For example L Enseigne de Gersaint or Gersaint s Shopsign 1720 a famous painting by Jean Antoine Watteau is displayed with other works in the appropriate setting of Charlottenburg Palace The whole collection of Old Master Western paintings in the Berlin State Museums is usually said to be around 3 000 15 In 1999 the Gemaldegalerie restituted to the heirs of the Jewish art collector Federico Gentili di Giuseppe a painting by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo entitled Rinaldo Abandoning Armida Gentili di Giuseppe s art collection had been plundered by Nazis and disposed of via a series of Paris sales in 1942 the Gemaldegalerie had acquired from the French art dealer Cailleux in 1979 16 In 2019 Berlin s Gemaldegalerie Old Master Gallery returned two late medieval panels to the heirs of a famous Jewish art collector Harry Fuld Senior who had been looted by Nazis In 1940 the panels by the Italian artist Giovanni di Paolo The Clothing of St Clare By St Francis and St Clare Rescuing the Shipwrecked c 1455 were acquired via the art dealer Carl Bumming by what was then called the Kaiser Friedrich Museum 17 In 2020 Berlin s Gemaldegalerie restituted a 16th century painting by Hans Baldung Grien to the heirs of Hans Purrmann was forced to sell the work from his collection after losing his livelihood due to Nazi persecution 18 Directors Edit One of the rooms with German medieval religious paintings Gustav Friedrich Waagen 1794 1868 1823 until 1868 Julius Meyer 1830 1893 1872 until 1890 Wilhelm von Bode 1845 1929 1890 until 1920 Max Jakob Friedlander 1867 1958 1924 until 1933 Karl Koetschau 1868 1949 1933 until 1936 Ernst Heinrich Zimmermann 1886 1971 1936 until 1945West Berlin Ernst Heinrich Zimmermann since 1957 Cornelius Muller Hofstede 1898 1974 1957 until 1964 Robert Oertel 1907 1981 1964 until 1973 Henning Bock 1931 1973 until 1990East Berlin Ludwig Justi 1876 1957 1946 until 1957 Hans Werner Grohn 1929 2009 1957 until 1960 Irene Geismeier 1960 until 1990After Reunion 1990 Henning Bock 1990 until 1996 Jan Kelch 1939 2017 1996 until 2004 Bernd Wolfgang Lindemann de 1951 2004 until 2016 Michael Eissenhauer 1956 2016 until 2021 Dagmar Hirschfelder 1973 since 2021See also EditList of art museums List of museums in Berlin List of museums in GermanyNotes Edit Prestel 10 12 Prestel 10 12 Connolly Kate 12 July 2012 Berlin plan for Old Masters to give way to modern art angers historians The Guardian Retrieved 21 July 2012 Old Masters face eviction from Berlin gallery The Guardian 12 July 2012 Retrieved 21 July 2012 Walde Gabriele 6 July 2012 Wir lassen uns nicht auf Meisterwerke reduzieren Die Zeit in German Retrieved 21 July 2012 Rauterberg Hanno 9 July 2012 Rettet die Gemaldegalerie Die Zeit in German Retrieved 21 July 2012 Kuhn Nicola 22 August 2013 Die Alten Meister bleiben in der Gemaldegalerie The old masters stay in the Gemaldegalerie Der Tagesspiegel in German Retrieved 19 November 2020 Prestel 4 5 Prestel 4 6 The King bought some 3 000 works from Solly with his own money allowing Waagen to take his pick Prestel 6 7 Prestel 7 8 Prestel 8 9 Harding Luke Renaissance woman returned to gallery The Guardian 1 June 2006 Retrieved on 12 October 2007 Prestel 8 10 Prestel 10 11 see 2012 press references below for the 3 000 figures Looted by the Nazis a Romanino is Returned lootedart com Archived from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Germany Returns Two Nazi Confiscated Old Masters to the Heirs of a Renowned Jewish Art Collector lootedart com Artnet Archived from the original on 24 June 2020 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Germany has returned two late medieval panels to the heirs of a famous Jewish art collector The religious paintings which were in Berlin s Gemaldegalerie Old Master Gallery originally formed part of the remarkable art collection of the Jewish businessman Harry Fuld Senior They are the latest pieces of Nazi looted art to have been successfully recovered by his heirs although hundreds of items remain missing The panels by the Italian artist Giovanni di Paolo depict two scenes of the life of St Clare of Assisi The Clothing of St Clare By St Francis and St Clare Rescuing the Shipwrecked Both date from around 1455 Berlin restitutes painting to heirs of degenerate artist for the first time lootedart com The Art Newspaper Archived from the original on 24 June 2020 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Berlin s Gemaldegalerie has restituted a 16th century painting by Hans Baldung Grien to the heirs of Hans Purrmann a friend of Henri Matisse who was persecuted by the Nazis as a degenerate artist and was forced to sell the work from his collection after losing his livelihood References Edit Prestel Gemaldegalerie Berlin Prestel Museum Guide 1998 Prestel Verlag ISBN 3791319124 Marco Bussagli Dresda I Dipinti Della Gemaldegalerie Bologna Scripta Maneant 2014 ISBN 978 88 7057 257 5External links EditOfficial website Kaiser Friedrich Museums Verein Association of the friends of the Gemaldegalerie www kulturforum berlin com Information about all cultural institutions at the Kulturforum in Berlin Virtual tour of the Gemaldegalerie Berlin provided by Google Arts amp Culture Media related to Gemaldegalerie Berlin at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gemaldegalerie Berlin amp oldid 1150387511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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