by Katie Boyden
Alessandro Turchi (self portrait on the left) painted the Madonna With Child found in Japan (Picture: Marco Ravenna/Electa /Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images/AP) |
A 16th century painting which was looted by Nazis during World War II has been found in Japan and returned to Poland.
The Madonna With Child is attributed to Alessandro Turchi and was part of the collection of Stanislaw Kostka-Potocki, a Polish 18th century aristocrat.
Madonna With Child by Alessandro Turchi. Photo courtesy artnet |
A 16th century painting which was looted by Nazis during World War II has been found in Japan and returned to Poland.
The Madonna With Child is attributed to Alessandro Turchi and was part of the collection of Stanislaw Kostka-Potocki, a Polish 18th century aristocrat.
It’s the latest of 600 looted art pieces which Poland has successfully repatriated – though more than 66,000 so-called war losses still remain unaccounted for.
The painting was spotted by Polish culture ministry experts at an auction in Tokyo last year. It had previously been sold at an auction in New York in the 1990s.
Culture minister Piotr Glinski said the painting was on the Nazi’s list of the 521 most valuable artworks they had stolen, among the tens of thousands they looted during their occupation of Poland.
The Madonna With Child was returned following negotiations with the Japanese side, and ‘the Mainichi Auction Inc as well as the person who was in possession of the painting have decided to return it to Poland, without any costs’.
Courier service staff prepare to ship the 16th century Italian painting "Madonna with Child," attributed to Alessandro Turchi, which was looted from a private Polish collection by Nazi Germany during World War II, at the Polish Embassy in Tokyo on Thursday, June 1, 2023. The priceless baroque painting was discovered in Japan and has been returned to Poland, authorities in Warsaw said Wednesday, May 31. Photo by Eugene Hoshiko. |
Poland has been trying to repatriate artwork looted during the war by Nazis and Soviet troops for decades.
Agata Modzelewska, head of the ministry’s department for restitution of culture items, said the Polish side always stresses in negotiations that returning looted art is ‘the best moral and ethical gesture’.
She added: ‘More and more of the looted objects are appearing at auctions because the memory (of their past) has weakened and the persons who are in their possession now do not have the full knowledge or are not aware of where the artwork is coming from."
First published at Metro - News...But not as you know it, June 1, 2023
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