Rare Poster Collection Looted by Nazis Will Go to Auction in New York
×
Error: Contact form not found.
by Zach Pontz
A collection of rare posters created by some of the world’s most renowned turn-of-the-century artists, and stolen from the original owner by the Nazis in the 1930s, is going to auction in New York, the BBC reports.
Gustave Klimt and Henri de Toulouse-lautrec are just two of the names associated with the thousands of posters in the collection originally accumulated by Hans Sachs. A Berlin museum came into the collection after the war, but in March a court ruled that they must return the posters the Sachs’ family.
Sachs died in 1974. The collection is estimated to be worth $6 million but experts say it could fetch twice that at auction.
A video about the posters can be viewed here.
The Incredible Jewish History of Rome (PART TWO)
Students Supporting Israel Launch Fall Tour to Promote Black, Ethiopian, Jewish Unity
Trump Says He Has Been ‘Best President’ For Israel, Questions Why Jews Vote Democrat
Majority of American Jews Still Hiding Identity to Avoid Hate Crime, New Survey Reports
Harvard Faculty Pen Letter Detailing Ongoing Antisemitism Crisis On Campus Amid White House Investigation
A New Book Reveals Perhaps the Most Important Lesson of October 7
California Jews Bear Disproportionate Share of Religion-Based Hate Crimes, New State Report Finds
Azerbaijani Jewish Leaders Urge Israel to Halt Armenian Genocide Bill Amid Fears of Strained Baku-Jerusalem Ties
How Latin America’s Political Realignment Is Shaping Israel’s Future
Ahead of the 2028 Presidential Election, Competing Worldviews on Iran Will Be on Full Display






The Incredible Jewish History of Rome (PART TWO)



