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摘要
摘要
This guide is a comprehensive and authoritative resource for tracing the ownership history of works of art. Focused on cultural property looted by the Nazis and others during WWII, it is divided into three parts: Basic Provenance Research and Principles, Holocaust-Era Provenance Research, and Appendixes, which include bibliographies of collections, dealer archives, and "red flag names" compiled by the Office of Strategic Services. Includes an index and reproductions of artworks and relevant documents.
評論 (1)
Choice 評論
Investigation into art provenance can be a most difficult and complex part of art research. Establishing a work's ownership history is not easy, as documents or oral information are often lost, unavailable, forged, or nonexistent. Confidentiality or secrecy often surrounds the transfer of a work of art from one hand to another, and buyers and sellers are often loath to reveal their sources. It is often difficult to know what sources are available for research and where to begin. To be sure, "what-to" examples are available in the entries of catalogues raisonnes and curatorial and registrars' files, but the "how-to" is usually learned through much trial and error, even when supplemented by oral information from teachers, mentors, or other colleagues. This publication is welcome, for it is devoted to what general publications on art research could only discuss in relatively small sections. The material is divided into two large parts covering basic provenance research and principles and Holocaust-era provenance research, where so much attention is being directed today. This work is invaluable for the specialized area of provenance research and is highly recommended for all academic and museum collections serving researchers and upper-division undergraduate and graduate students. J. Weidman Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
目錄
Introduction | p. ix |
Why is provenance important? | p. 1 |
Major trends in collecting European art | p. 1 |
Conducting provenance research | p. 5 |
How to use this guide | p. 5 |
Part 1 Basic Provenance Research and Principles | p. 7 |
Chapter 1 Introduction | p. 9 |
What information do you need? | p. 9 |
Chapter 2 Assembling the Information You Have | p. 11 |
The object | p. 11 |
Institutional files | p. 15 |
Case study: Portrait of James Hay | p. 17 |
Chapter 3 Library Research | p. 21 |
The Artist | p. 21 |
The Collector | p. 24 |
Dealers | p. 28 |
Auctions | p. 28 |
Case study: Holbein, Sir Bryan Tuke | p. 30 |
Chapter 4 How to Record Provenance | p. 33 |
Sample format for recording provenance | p. 33 |
Part 2 Holocaust-Era Provenance Research | p. 37 |
Chapter 5 Introduction | p. 39 |
Chapter 6 Historical Overview | p. 41 |
Key dates | p. 41 |
Nazi collecting priorities | p. 41 |
Case study: De Bles, Landscape with Burning City | p. 44 |
Special case: The office of the alien property custodian and the "vesting" of cultural property | p. 46 |
Chapter 7 Prioritizing Your Research | p. 49 |
Mind the gap | p. 49 |
Red flags | p. 50 |
Case study: "Red-flag" names | p. 52 |
Chapter 8 U.S. Resources | p. 55 |
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) | p. 55 |
Looting | p. 58 |
Case study: Snyders, Still Life with Fruit and Game | p. 68 |
Investigations | p. 71 |
Case study: Two Matisse paintings from the Paul Rosenberg collection | p. 74 |
Claims | p. 78 |
Restitution | p. 94 |
Other U.S. Resources | p. 103 |
Case study: Degas, Landscape with Smokestacks | p. 105 |
Chapter 9 European Resources | p. 109 |
Archives, restitution agencies, and published losses | p. 109 |
Special case: Sales from Soviet museums, 1928-31 | p. 134 |
Case study: Cranach, Adam and Eve | p. 135 |
Conclusion | p. 141 |
Contributors | p. 145 |
Glossary | p. 146 |
Illustrations | p. 148 |
Index | p. 150 |
Appendices to Part 1 | p. 159 |
Appendix A Selected bibliography on the history of collecting: collectors, collections, grand tours | p. 161 |
Appendix B Selected biographical research resources | p. 201 |
Appendix C Selected bibliography of dealers and dealers' memoirs | p. 206 |
Appendix D Dealer archives and locations | p. 214 |
Appendix E Selected resources for auction sales and exhibitions | p. 243 |
Appendix F Selected art libraries and photographic archives | p. 246 |
Appendices to Part 2 | p. 253 |
Appendix G Selected bibliography on looting and restitution | p. 255 |
Appendix H The Art Looting Investigation Unit (ALIU) List | p. 259 |
Appendix I Selected "red-flag" names from the ALIU List | p. 293 |
Appendix J List of Consolidated and Detailed Interrogation Reports | p. 297 |
Appendix K List of Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (ERR) codes | p. 299 |