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But the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a Viennese cabaret performer killed in the Holocaust, said the works had conveyed a powerful effect now that they had been restored to Grünbaum’s estate.
Fritz Grünbaum, a Viennese singer and comedian who was outspoken against Hitler in his act, is believed to have owned at least 450 works of art before the Nazis annexed Austria. His relatives ...
Seven pieces of Nazi-looted art were returned Wednesday to family heirs of the Holocaust victim they were taken from during World War II. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and others ...
LOWER MANHATTAN, New York (WABC) -- Two pieces of art have been returned to the family of Fritz Grünbaum, an Austrian-Jewish cabaret performer whose art collection was stolen by the Nazis during ...
Fritz Grünbaum’s relative Timothy Reif, 64, was joined by his son, Paul, 20, on Friday as they were presented with two more Egon Schiele works — “Girl with Black Hair” and “Portrait of ...
Seven pieces of art made by Austrian expressionist Egon Schiele that were looted from Fritz Grünbaum by the Nazis have been returned to his heirs more than 80 years after they were taken.
On Friday in Manhattan, the estate of Holocaust victim Fritz Grünbaum accepted "Portrait of a Man,” which was surrendered by the Carnegie Museum of Art and "Girl with Black Hair,” surrendered ...
The artworks were returned to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, who was killed in the Dachau concentration camp in 1941, in an emotional ceremony at the office of the Manhattan district attorney ...
On Friday in Manhattan, the estate of Holocaust victim Fritz Grünbaum accepted “Portrait of a Man,” which was surrendered by the Carnegie Museum of Art and “Girl with Black Hair ...
Among the millions of Jews murdered by the Nazis was the prominent Jewish Viennese cabaret performer Fritz Grünbaum. He was murdered at the Dachau concentration camp in 1941. Prior to his murder ...
Nazis stole dozens of art pieces from Fritz Grünbaum, Manhattan DA says The drawing, believed to be of Schiele's wife, belonged to Fritz Grünbaum, an Austrian-Jewish cabaret performer.
They had seen the pictures before, in the collections of the museums that owned them until earlier this year. But the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, a Viennese cabaret performer killed in the Holocaust, ...