Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Argentine court detains Nazi’s daughter over looted art

Court orders house arrest after artwork believed to have been stolen in the Holocaust vanished from a family property.

Looted Dutch Painting
A recent real estate listing in Argentina featuring “Portrait of a Lady.” Source: Screenshot courtesy of AD/Used with permission.

A judge in Argentina on Tuesday placed the daughter of a late Nazi under house arrest after police failed to find a painting believed to be in her possession, which was stolen from a Jewish person during the Holocaust.

The federal court at Mar Del Plata, a city situated about 250 miles south of Buenos Aires, placed Patricia Kadgien and her husband under house arrest for 72 hours on suspicion that they had interfered with an investigation into the whereabout of “Portrait of a Lady” by the late-Baroque painter Giuseppe Ghislandi, Argentina’s La Nacion newspaper reported.

Law enforcement agents in Argentina last week raided the couple’s house in search of the painting, but the object had been removed by the time they arrived. Three additional raids were authorized at properties belonging to the couple but the painting was not found.

The raids followed a media report in the Netherlands about the early 18th-century painting “Portrait of a Lady by the Italian painter Fra Galgario aka Giuseppe Ghislandi (1655–1743).

The painting was seen on a real estate listing, where it casually appeared as part of the interior decoration of an asset in Mar del Plata, the Algemeen Dagblad newspaper, aka AD, reported on Monday. The paper’s research into how the painting got there led to Friedrich Kadgien, who had served as Hermann Göring’s financial adviser. Kadgien fled to Argentina after World War II and died there in 1978. The asset on sale belonged to his daughter Patricia.

Argentina’s Customs Collection and Control Agency (ARCA) last month asked the federal court in Mar del Plata to authorize it to seize the painting, but when agents arrived with the warrant, they found a tapestry in its place, along with old documents and firearms.

Prosecutors believe the couple are guilty of concealment and possible trafficking of stolen cultural property, El País reported. The couple petitioned the court to nullify the investigation, claiming the statute of limitation applied, according to La Nacion.

The painting belonged to Jewish Dutch art dealer Jacques Goudstikker, who sold it under duress in 1940.

Similar artworks by Fra Galgario have fetched only several thousand dollars, and some even less, at auction in recent years.

Goudstikker’s sole heir, his daughter-in-law Marei von Saher, 81, has said she plans to file a claim and launch legal action to have the painting restored to her family.

Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) is the fastest-growing news agency covering Israel and the Jewish world. We provide news briefs features opinions and analysis to 100 print newspapers and digital publications on a daily basis.
The victims suffered light blast wounds and were listed in good condition at Beilinson Hospital.
The IDF said that the the Al-Amana Fuel Company sites generate millions of dollars a year for the Iranian-backed terror group.
A U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission fact sheet says that the two countries are working to “undermine the U.S.-led global order.”
“Opining on world affairs is not the job of a teachers’ union,” said Mika Hackner, director of research at the North American Values Institute.

“We’re launching a campaign to show the difference in the attitude towards Israel and towards Iran,” Daniel Meron, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, told JNS.
Sara Brown, of the AJC, told JNS that “today we saw the very best of the democratic process.”