American museums have long recognized that their collections sometimes include two categories of artwork whose prior owners parted with the pieces unwillingly: Nazi-looted art and illicitly exported archaeological objects. The relevant industry associations—the American Alliance of Museums and the Association of Art Museum Directors—have promulgated self-regulatory regimes that purport to ensure that museums return any objects to their rightful owners when they do not hold good title. However, the success of these regimes has varied widely based on whether the artwork is an archaeological antiquity or a Nazi-looted piece. This Article identifies the ways in which the regimes and the contexts in which they were created diverge. It argues tha...
The German/American Provenance Research Exchange Program (PREP; 2017–2019) was jointly initiated and...
Restitution of Nazi-looted art in the United States is a complicated legal and policy issue. Victims...
Sixty years after the end of World War II much of the artwork looted or forcibly sold during the war...
During the Nazi regime, much of Europe’s art was pillaged. This Note addresses the conflicts faced b...
Alongside their campaign of physically exterminating the Jewish population of Europe, the Nazis carr...
This Article begins with some historical background surrounding the Nazi pillaging of several family...
Humans have been collecting artifacts for centuries, whether it is for their aesthetic value or for ...
The Nazis engaged in widespread art looting from Holocaust victims, either taking the artwork outrig...
In recent years, there have been a plethora of cases in which museums have had to release treasured ...
In 1970 UNESCO adopted a convention intended to stem the flow of looted antiquities from developing ...
Even though the restitution of Nazi-looted property from Austrian federal museums is clearly regulat...
Museums and sovereign states often face a dilemma when confronted with a claim seeking restitution o...
(Excerpt) The unusual circumstances surrounding the recent return of the Geldorp portrait to a publi...
Provenance, the ownership history of an artifact or work of art, has become one of the primary mecha...
Antiquities looting rips artifacts out of their historical and archaeological context. It deprives c...
The German/American Provenance Research Exchange Program (PREP; 2017–2019) was jointly initiated and...
Restitution of Nazi-looted art in the United States is a complicated legal and policy issue. Victims...
Sixty years after the end of World War II much of the artwork looted or forcibly sold during the war...
During the Nazi regime, much of Europe’s art was pillaged. This Note addresses the conflicts faced b...
Alongside their campaign of physically exterminating the Jewish population of Europe, the Nazis carr...
This Article begins with some historical background surrounding the Nazi pillaging of several family...
Humans have been collecting artifacts for centuries, whether it is for their aesthetic value or for ...
The Nazis engaged in widespread art looting from Holocaust victims, either taking the artwork outrig...
In recent years, there have been a plethora of cases in which museums have had to release treasured ...
In 1970 UNESCO adopted a convention intended to stem the flow of looted antiquities from developing ...
Even though the restitution of Nazi-looted property from Austrian federal museums is clearly regulat...
Museums and sovereign states often face a dilemma when confronted with a claim seeking restitution o...
(Excerpt) The unusual circumstances surrounding the recent return of the Geldorp portrait to a publi...
Provenance, the ownership history of an artifact or work of art, has become one of the primary mecha...
Antiquities looting rips artifacts out of their historical and archaeological context. It deprives c...
The German/American Provenance Research Exchange Program (PREP; 2017–2019) was jointly initiated and...
Restitution of Nazi-looted art in the United States is a complicated legal and policy issue. Victims...
Sixty years after the end of World War II much of the artwork looted or forcibly sold during the war...