This lavishly illustrated book marks the return of a lost treasure to the Netherlands. As part of the renowned Koenigs Collection in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, these T 39 drawings and 3 prints were unlawfully obtained by the Nazis during the Second World War, together with a further 389 drawings. During the aftermath of the war this part of the collection disap'peared. After a long quest a substantial share of the missing drawings was eventually found in Kyiv, capital of Ukraine. Subsequently,the Ukrainian authorities, recognizing the Netherlands' claim of ownership,decided to return these works of art to the Netherlands. The drawings are now reunited with the Koenigs Collection in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen as a Loan frnm the Netherlands Institute of Cultural Heritage.
The vicissitudes of the missing drawings during and after the war are recounted in an absorbing essay by Albert Elen, Senior Curator of the Print Room at Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, who has been involved in the search for the missing drawings for many years. Most of the recovered drawings are by t 5th- and ,6th-century German artists, including works by such famous draughtsmen as Hans Holbein, Hans Batdung Grien and Lucas Cranach. They have not been on public view for more than 64 years.Fifty have never even been illustrated before and as such represent new discoveries. All are reproduced here in full colour for the first time, many at actual size, with revised material data and attributions. They are presented to the world audience to admire and eniov.
Foreword
Leonid Kuchma
Foreword
Jan Peter Balkenende
Return of a Lost Treasure
Albert J. Elen
Catalogue
German drawings
Non-German drawings
Prints
Drawings not yet located
Concordances