
The stolen painting was stolen by the Nazis found in the advertisement of Argentine Real Estate Brokers, the prosecution said after attacking at home.
The portrait of Giuseppe Ghislandi’s portrait was hanging on the sofa in a real estate near Buenos Aires, and the daughter of Nazis, who fled Germany after World War II, sold.
But this week, the police attack did not reveal the picture. But federal prosecutors Carlos Martínez spoke to the local media.
Prime Minister Martinez said he is treating it for smuggling, according to Argentine Daily Clarin.
The newspaper reported that the painting was missing from the wall when the furniture was relocated and the property was attacked.
The Peter Schouten of the Algemon Dagblad newspaper in the Netherlands first reappeared for the first time, and said, “The picture was removed even after the media reports soon or after the media report.”
“There is now a big rug where words and natural scenes hang.
The portrait of the lady was one of the collections of Amsterdam Art Dealer JACQUES GOUDSTIKKER, and many of them were forcibly sold by the Nazis after his death.
Some works were restored in Germany after the war and were displayed in Amsterdam as part of the Dutch National Collection.
More than 80 years, the Portraeppe Ghislandi’s Portraeppe Ghislandi’s paintings of Conte -Coleoni have not been known until now.
According to AD’s survey, he found an exhibition document that suggests that Friedrich Kadgien, SS Director and Senior Treasury Adviser of Hermann Göring, who fled in 1945 before moving to Argentina in 1945, owns the painting.
KADGIEN died in 1979, but the American file with AD was included as follows.
The paper has been trying to talk to two daughters in Buenos Aires for many years, but he added that it is no use.
One of Kadgien’s daughters has made progress in finding a missing work only when he sells his house.
AD said it was found in one of the sisters’ social media, another plundering work, with the flowers of the 17th -century Dutch painter Abraham Mignon.
Following the appearance of the picture, one of the sisters said that the Dutch newspaper did not know what he wanted and the “pictures he was talking.”
GOUDSTIKKER’s real estate lawyers said they would make every effort to reclaim the painting.
His only signature inheritance, Mariei von Saher, said her family said, “It aims to bring back all the works that have been robbed from Jacques’ collection and restore his legacy.”
According to AD, she owned 202 pieces in 2006.