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Message
Painting Stolen by Nazis during WWII Discovered in Online Real Estate Listing
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:21 pm
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:21 pm
quote:
"This is the kind of case you dream of," said Arthur Brand, the Dutch art detective often called "the Indiana Jones of the art world." "A painting stolen in WWII, thought lost for decades, suddenly pops up on a real estate website in Argentina, hanging above a sofa," Brand said. "You can't write a better script."
quote:
An 18th-century portrait stolen by the Nazis during WWII is believed to have resurfaced in the most unexpected place: hanging above a sofa in a coastal Argentinian home and discovered not by law enforcement or a museum, but spotted in a photo on a real estate website.
The painting, "Portrait of a Lady" by Italian baroque artist Giuseppe Vittore Ghislandi, belonged to Jacques Goudstikker, a prominent Dutch-Jewish art dealer whose collection of more than 1,100 works was seized after the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in 1940. Senior Nazi officials, including Hermann Göring, acquired hundreds of pieces, according to the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE).
The potential discovery is the result of years of work by Dutch daily newspaper Algemeen Dagblad (AD) investigative journalists Cyril Rosman, Paul Post and Peter Schouten, who have been pursuing the case for nearly a decade.
https://abcnews.go.com/International/painting-stolen-nazis-wwii-believed-discovered-argentine-real/story?id=124990044
quote:
Rosman said the team began tracing Friedrich Kadgien, Göring's financial adviser and close confidant, several years ago.
"Kadgien escaped to South America at the end of the war," Rosman told ABC News. "We knew from archival documents that he brought diamonds, jewelry, and two stolen paintings with him. We've spent years trying to piece together his life here and where those paintings ended up."
Kadgien died in Buenos Aires in 1978. His two daughters inherited properties in Mar del Plata, where the investigation eventually led the AD journalists.
quote:
After years of dead ends, the AD team resolved to make one final attempt. They sent Peter Schouten, AD's correspondent in Argentina, to visit the property.
"I rang the bell. Nobody answered but we saw movement inside," Schouten recalled. "Then we noticed a 'For Sale' sign in the garden."
Back at his hotel, Schouten looked up the property listing ..... 'Look, isn't that the painting?'" Schouten said. "I told him, 'No, that can't be true. The Dutch government has been looking for this painting for 80 years … it can't just be hanging above a sofa in Mar del Plata.' But there it was."
This post was edited on 8/27/25 at 4:01 pm
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:23 pm to Shexter
enough of this stupid crap. How on Earth is this unexpected? Do people still not know that many Nazis fled to Argentina?
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:26 pm to Shexter
quote:
most unexpected place
quote:
Nazi
quote:
Argentina

Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:27 pm to Shexter
Lots of Nazis moved to South America. Not really a shocker.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:27 pm to Shexter
quote:
An 18th-century portrait stolen by the Nazis
quote:
is believed to have resurfaced in the most unexpected place: hanging above a sofa in a coastal Argentinian home

Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:31 pm to Shexter
It is amazing they were still investigating this after all these years!
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:45 pm to LSUlefty
I think the shocking part is it’s basically on Zillow where it was noticed, while a government has been looking for it the better part of a century
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:57 pm to notsince98
quote:
Do people still not know that many Nazis fled to Argentina?
That wasn't really the point. The irony is that the Dutch have been trying to get in this guy's house for years, then easily see it on a Zillow type listing.
The Dutch investigators already knew it was in the house.
quote:
The Algemeen Dagblad, also known by its initialism AD is a Dutch daily newspaper based in Rotterdam.
quote:
Kadgien died in Buenos Aires in 1978 His two daughters inherited properties in Mar del Plata, where the investigation eventually led the AD journalists.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 3:59 pm to Fun Bunch
quote:
most unexpected place
That would be them finding it on a Zillow/Redfin type website.
quote:
"This is the kind of case you dream of," said Arthur Brand, the Dutch art detective often called "the Indiana Jones of the art world." "A painting stolen in WWII, thought lost for decades, suddenly pops up on a real estate website in Argentina, hanging above a sofa," Brand said. "You can't write a better script."
https://www.roblescasascampos.com/
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:06 pm to Shexter
quote:
An 18th-century portrait stolen by the Nazis during WWII is believed to have resurfaced in the most unexpected place: hanging above a sofa in a coastal Argentinian home and discovered not by law enforcement or a museum, but spotted in a photo on a real estate website.
Argentina is hardly the unexpected place for stolen Nazi treasure.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:09 pm to Shexter
quote:
An 18th-century portrait stolen by the Nazis during WWII is believed to have resurfaced in the most unexpected place:
quote:
in Argentina
Every writer now is low IQ and ignorant, I mean thats literally one of if not the most expected place it could turn up.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:13 pm to Strannix
quote:
Every writer now is low IQ and ignorant, I mean thats literally one of if not the most expected place it could turn up.
Wait until AI is generating all the content you read.
This post was edited on 8/27/25 at 4:14 pm
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:13 pm to NATidefan
quote:
That ain't no lady.
That looks like Saul Goodman in his great great grandma's dress.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:17 pm to Shexter
Why is it such a shock to people that Nazi’s escaped to South America?
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:32 pm to Fat and Happy
quote:
Why is it such a shock to people that Nazi’s escaped to South America?
It's not. Please scroll back up and actually read the post. The shock is the blunder made by the sisters and/or real estate agent to show the stolen painting in the listing photos. The sisters have been hiding the painting since the 1978 death of their Nazi father.
Posted on 8/27/25 at 4:34 pm to NATidefan
quote:
That ain't no lady.
That's a man, baby!!
Posted on 8/27/25 at 5:28 pm to NATidefan
quote:
That ain't no lady.

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