Priceless 16th-century Italian painting, looted by Nazis during World War II, back in Poland
A priceless baroque painting from the 16th century, attributed to Alessandro Turchi and looted by Nazi Germany during World War II, has been returned to Poland after being discovered in Japan. It is one of the 600 looted pieces of art that Poland ...

The "Madonna with Child" attributed to Alessandro Turchi, is the latest of some 600 looted artistic pieces that Poland has successfully repatriated. More than 66,000 so-called war losses remain unaccounted for. The painting was handed over during a ceremony at Poland's Embassy in Tokyo Wednesday.
Culture Minister Piotr Glinski told reporters in Warsaw that the baroque painting was on the Nazis' list of the 521 most valuable pieces of art among the tens of thousands of artworks that they looted when they occupied Poland between 1939-45.
He said it was "not easy" to explain the history behind the looted works as well as the need for their return. But he said the "Madonna with Child" was returned following negotiations with the Japanese side and the "Mainichi Auction Inc. as well as the person who was in possession of the painting have decided to return it to Poland, without any costs."

Agata Modzelewska, head of the ministry's department for restitution of culture items, said the Polish side always stresses in negotiations that returning looted art is "the best moral and ethical gesture."
The painting was identified by ministry experts at an auction in Tokyo in 2022. It comes from a collection of Poland's 18th-century aristocrat Stanislaw Kostka-Potocki. In 1823, the painting was listed among artworks belonging to another Polish aristocrat, Henryk Lubomirski, in the town of Przeworsk. It was looted during the war and was sold at a New York auction in the late 1990s.
"More and more of the looted objects are appearing at auctions because the memory (of their past) has weakened and the persons who are in their possession now do not have the full knowledge or are not aware of where the artwork is coming from," Modzelewska told The Associated Press.
Poland has for decades actively sought to repatriate art looted during the war by the Nazis and Soviet troops.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.