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PROVENANCE PROJECT

Collection Info
PROVENANCE PROJECT

Over the past twenty years art museums have become much more conscious of the importance of understanding the previous ownership of works in their collections. This is especially the case with respect to works of art that might have been illegally obtained by the National Socialist government in Germany between 1932 and 1946. The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center continues to research the history of its collections and adheres to the professional guidelines in the museum field by publishing those works of art for which we cannot determine with a substantial degree of accuracy where the works were during that Nazi period. In addition it is also an industry requirement that we publish any Western or Pre-Columbian antiquities if we are not sure they were in the United States before 1973. Having an interrupted provenance does not by itself indicate an illegal chapter in an object’s history, but signals that we are openly announcing the fact pending further research.

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Atlas Maintaining the Balance of the World
Felice Boscaratti
before 1772
The Dressing Room
Henry Fuseli
1806-1807
Culture: Swiss, English
Landscape
Charles François Daubigny
1870
The Defense of Paris (Memories of 1870)
Gustave Doré
1871
Culture: French
The Seine at Saint-Cloud
Edvard Munch
1890
View of a Dutch Village with a Ruined Wall
Daniel Vosmaer
c. 1660-1665
Culture: Dutch
St. Dorothea of Cappadocia
Luca Giordano
c. 1690
Landscape
Paul Cézanne
c. 1865
Joan of Arc and the Furies
William Hamilton
Nd
Preparing the Flower Beds, from "The Seasons"
Pieter Brueghel II
c. 1620
Culture: Flemish
Battle for the Breeches
Adriaen van de Venne
c. 1635
Culture: Dutch
An Old Woman Drinking
Petrus Staverenus
Nd
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