Sprengel Museum (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Sprengel Museum" in English language version.

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art-magazin.de

baunetz.de

bild.de

  • "Meili + Peter entwerfen Ausbau für Sprengel Museum". bild.de (in German). 1 March 2010. Retrieved 18 February 2023.

books.google.com

derstandard.at

haz.de

lootedart.com

  • "Sprengel Museum, Hanover Provenance Research into Nazi-confiscated works of art in the museum's collection". www.lootedart.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022. The Leipzig publisher and collector Dr. Gustav Kirstein had purchased the work at the 1920 Berlin Secession. Kirstein committed suicide in 1934. Soon afterwards his firm was taken over by the Nazis. The family's art collection was handed over to the Leipzig art gallery C.G. Boerner and forty-four works were placed with the storage firm Erhardt Schneider. The proceeds of the sale went to a blocked account. Kirstein's daughters had already emigrated to the USA. In 1949 the Hanover collector Dr. Bernhard Sprengel purchased the Corinth from Lothar-Günter Buchheim in Berlin. In 1979 Sprengel donated his collection to the city of Hannover and the Sprengel Museum was founded as a result. After inquiries instituted in 1999 by the Commission for Art Recovery, the museum restituted the painting to the family.

theartnewspaper.com

web.archive.org

  • "Meili + Peter planen Sprengel-Umbau". Art – Das Kunstmagazin (in German). 1 March 2010. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011.
  • "Sprengel Museum, Hanover Provenance Research into Nazi-confiscated works of art in the museum's collection". www.lootedart.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2022. The Leipzig publisher and collector Dr. Gustav Kirstein had purchased the work at the 1920 Berlin Secession. Kirstein committed suicide in 1934. Soon afterwards his firm was taken over by the Nazis. The family's art collection was handed over to the Leipzig art gallery C.G. Boerner and forty-four works were placed with the storage firm Erhardt Schneider. The proceeds of the sale went to a blocked account. Kirstein's daughters had already emigrated to the USA. In 1949 the Hanover collector Dr. Bernhard Sprengel purchased the Corinth from Lothar-Günter Buchheim in Berlin. In 1979 Sprengel donated his collection to the city of Hannover and the Sprengel Museum was founded as a result. After inquiries instituted in 1999 by the Commission for Art Recovery, the museum restituted the painting to the family.