The European Art Sale
The European Art Sale
Property from the Descendants of David Goldmann
A Thoughtful Pause
Lot Closed
October 25, 03:02 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000 - 5,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property from the Descendants of David Goldmann
August von Pettenkofen
Austrian
1822 - 1889
A Thoughtful Pause
initialed a. p. (lower right)
oil on panel
panel: 12½ by 8½ in.; 31.7 by 21.5 cm.
framed: 24½ by 20¼ in.; 62.2 by 51.4 cm.
The present lot comes from the noteworthy collection of David Goldmann, an Austrian businessman who fled his home country with his family in 1938 after the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany. Goldmann amassed a significant fine and decorative arts collection consisting of Italian, Northern and Austrian paintings as well as Viennese porcelain and furniture. Soon after the Anschluss, the Gestapo deemed Goldmann’s apartment and contents as 'enemy property'.1 The most valuable items of the group were removed and reserved for Hitler’s Führermuseum while the rest were auctioned off by the Dorotheum.
The reverse of the painting memorializes this complicated period of their history with labels noting each depot and storage facility the paintings moved to while under German control. After being taken to the central depot of the Kunsthistoriches Museum, the paintings were then stored in the Altaussee salt mine, which was then seized by the U.S. Army on May 8, 1945, and the artworks transferred to the Munich Central Collecting Point marking the beginnings of the restitution process. Goldmann managed to successfully have most of these items returned to him in New York by the late 1940s. The paintings and drawings have remained in the family since this time.
1. A. Reininghaus, Recollecting. Raub und Restitution, exhibition catalogue, Vienna 2009, p. 133.