Owner: Maurice de Rothschild — Chateau d'Armainvilliers, France
Collection: (BoR) Botschaft Rothschild--The largest collections stolen in France mostly by specialized elements of the German occupation forces belonged to the Rothschild family. The German Embassy in Paris guided by Ambassador Otto Abetz, oversaw the plunder of property belonging to various members of the Rothschild family, including Maurice, Alexandrine, James-Armand and Edmond. These early removals of Rothschild property occurred in the summer and fall of 1940 and were greatly aided by the Devisenschutzkommando (DSK), a securities and financial fraud police organization that had jurisdiction over bank vaults and safe deposit boxes where thousands of art objects were stored for safekeeping.
Inventory No.: BoR 71
II, 1,2
Kiste Nr. B 50
Artist: 18. Jh., Thomas Gainsborough [...], geb. 1727 in Sudbury, gest. 1788.
Medium: Paintings
Title: Bildnis einer Dame in blauem Jagdkostüm, die auf einem Stein sitzt.
Description: Im Hintergrund Pferd und Reitknecht.
Aus der Slg. Maurice Rothschild, Armainvilliers.
G.
Aufbewahrungsort: Peter.
Öl auf Lwd.
76 x 63,5 cm gerahmt
Zugangstag: In Paris: übernommen von der Botschaft.
Literature: Vgl. dazu: "Pantheon" 1928, Bd. I, S. 33, Beitrag von R.R. Tabloite, "Thomas Gainsborough's Development."
Provenance and Comments: This item was packed in a crate at the German Embassy, then transferred to the Louvre from where it was taken to the Jeu de Paume. The frame for this painting was restituted to Maurice de Rothschild on 17 May 1946.
Archival Sources: RG 260 M1943 Reel 2 NARA; Bundesarchiv, B323/294; RA 620, RV 103, MAEE, Paris, France
Measurements: 76 x 63,5 cm
Framed? Yes
Intake place: Chateau d'Armainvilliers
Transfer place: German Embassy, Paris
Transfer place: Louvre
Transfer place: Jeu de Paume
Transfer date: 1941-05-02
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