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A German government-appointed task force has already established that 'Two Riders on the Beach' painted by Max Liebermann should be returned to the rightful owners' heirs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

More than 200 queries received on Nazi-era art hoard

A German government-appointed task force has already established that 'Two Riders on the Beach' painted by Max Liebermann should be returned to the rightful owners' heirs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
A German government-appointed task force has already established that ‘Two Riders on the Beach’ painted by Max Liebermann should be returned to the rightful owners’ heirs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
BERLIN (AFP) – A task force investigating the provenance of priceless paintings found in a Nazi-era art hoard said Friday it had received more than 200 queries about specific works by possible heirs.

The head of the panel of experts, Ingeborg Berggreen-Merkel, said there had been a strong response to its call for the families of suspected victims of art looting under Hitler to come forward and stake claims.

“We are reviewing each individual case – the people have a right to that,” she told German news agency DPA.

But she added: “Thoroughness must in each case trump speed.”

The 14-member international task force was established a year ago to sort through the spectacular trove hidden for decades by Cornelius Gurlitt, son of a powerful art dealer during the Third Reich.

Around 500 works found in 2012 in Gurlitt’s flat in the southern city of Munich are suspected by the task force of having been plundered by the Nazis.

Berggreen-Merkel said the experts hoped to wrap up the bulk of their work by the end of 2015.

She said the panel had focused first on claims by Holocaust survivors, then on queries from descendants.

“We want to give people whose families suffered so terribly under these appalling conditions answers as soon as possible,” she said.

Gurlitt died in May and named in his will the Museum of Fine Arts in Bern as the sole heir of the more than 1,000 paintings and sketches by Picasso, Monet, Chagall and other masters.

The Swiss museum agreed late last month to accept the bequest and pledged to work closely with the task force to assist restitution efforts.

It has published a list of the artworks on its website http://www.kunstmuseumbern.ch .

The Bern museum has said those works would stay in Germany and not “pass through its doors” until thorough provenance research had been completed.

The Gurlitt trove has thrown a spotlight on the problem of looted art still held by museums and in private collections nearly 70 years after World War II.

Jewish groups strongly criticized the secrecy with which Germany initially handled the case and Berlin has been at pains to display more transparency on the issue.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


A German government-appointed task force has already established that 'Two Riders on the Beach' painted by Max Liebermann should be returned to the rightful owners' heirs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
A German government-appointed task force has already established that ‘Two Riders on the Beach’ painted by Max Liebermann should be returned to the rightful owners’ heirs. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.