Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sotheby’s auctions ‘Head Study of a Young Woman’ following painting’s return to Jewish heirs

The 17th-century work sold for $460,800.

Jacob (Jacques) Jordaens, “The Feast of the Bean King”
“The Feast of the Bean King,” oil on canvas painting by Jacob (“Jacques”) Jordaens, between 1640 and 1645. Credit: Collection of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna via Wikimedia Commons.

An artwork created from 1615-1620 and stolen by German Nazis in 1940 from a Jewish-owned bank’s collection sold on July 3 for a substantial sum following the return to its owners’ heirs.

Sotheby’s auctioned “Head Study of a Young Woman,” a primarily brown portrait featuring a woman with pink cheeks and painted by Jacob (“Jacques”) Jordaens. The painting sold for £360,000, which equates to $460,800.

Jacob (Jacques) Jordaens Self-Portrait
Jacob (Jacques) Jordaens, self-portrait, oil on canvas circa 1650. Credit: Bavarian State Painting Collections at the Munich Central Collecting Point via Wikimedia Commons.

The recovered work is the first to be sold by heirs of shareholders of Lisser & Rosenkranz Bank.

They seek a further 2,500 drawings and 50 paintings that had been held as collateral for a loan to Franz Koenigs, a Dutch collector. The primary shareholders in the bank were Siegfried Kramarsky and Salomon Flörsheim, also Jewish.

Those representing the work’s heirs say they suspect that Luftwaffe head Hermann Göring may have given the painting to Adolf Hitler on his birthday in 1941 or 1942.

Also a draughtsman, and a designer of tapestries and prints, Jordaens, lived from 1593 to 1678. Critics and historians regard him as a key 17th-century Flemish artist known for his scenes of peasant life.

Another work by Jordaens, “Saint Martin Healing the Possessed Man,” sold for $4.73 million in a Sotheby auction in 2016, the highest price one of his paintings has generated.

There was never a question whether bar and bat mitzvahs were going to continue, says Rabbi Marla Hornsten at Temple Israel, despite the havoc that had teachers and children evacuate the building.
“We will not rest in the mission to stop the spread of radical Islam,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott stated.
The panel conducts research on antisemitic activity and works with public and private entities on statewide initiatives on Holocaust and genocide education.
“If it’s something that families are attuned to, then I think it may be a good way to engage the kids on that level,” Rabbi Steven Burg, of Aish, told JNS.
“I was a little surprised at the U.K. to be honest with you,” U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House. “They should have acted a lot faster.”
“It is imperative that university administrators rise to the occasion to take a firm stand against antisemitism and racial violence,” Sen. Bill Cassidy wrote.