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October 8, 2025

Caveat Emptor: What the Dancing Maenad Can Tell Us About the Market for Looted Art

Christie's 2019 Auction
In November 2019, ARCA published a blog post raising questions about a 5th-century BCE polychrome antefix depicting a dancing maenad, which had been consigned to a Christie’s auction and that I believed the piece warranted closer scrutiny. For those unfamiliar, an antefix is a decorative architectural element once placed along the eaves of ancient roofs to conceal the joints between tiles.

What drew my attention was the striking resemblance between the object at right and three other Etruscan antefixes, also portraying maenads, that had previously been repatriated to Italy after being identified as having been illegal excavated and removed from Italy.


The provenance of the previous, 2019-consigned, antefix up for auction at Christie's read:
Provenance:

In terms of its circulation history, that sparse entry left roughly 2,500 years unaccounted for as nothing prior to 1994 was specified.  Knowing a bit about the consignor's background, I knew, that before her death, Ingrid McAlpine had been married to the ancient art dealer Bruce McAlpine, and that prior to their divorce, both were listed as proprietors of McAlpine Ancient Art Limited in the United Kingdom.

The McAlpines’ names have surfaced in connection with other trafficked antiquities that passed through the legitimate art market. Among these is an Attic black-figured hydria which reached the McAlpines through Palladion Antike Kunst, a gallery operated by disgraced dealer Gianfranco Becchina. Their names also appear alongside the red flag names of Robin Symes and Barbara and Lawrence Fleischman, in relation to the donation of a looted Apulian bell-krater, both objects of which were later restituted to Italy. 

In addition, former Judge Paolo Giorgio Ferri, the Italian judge who worked heavily on these looting cases, showed me a letter, seized by the Italian authorities during their investigations which was written by the staff of Bruce and Ingrid's McAlpine Ancient Art Gallery.  This letter, dated 8 July 1986, tied the couple to at least one transaction with Giacomo Medici and Christian Boursaud and referred obliquely to companies that the later convicted Rome dealer operated through third parties, fronts, or pseudonyms. 

Despite my suspicions I still didn't know where that Etruscan dancing maenad came from.  

Villa Giulia, 1937 Excavation
A few weeks into that investigation, and following a notification from the Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage, curators Leonardo Bochicchio and Daniele F. Maras of Italy’s Ministry of Culture identified the likely find spot of the disputed object: Campetti Nord. They were able to pinpoint the location precisely, as the National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia already held another headless antefix of a dancing maenad, featuring the same polychrome details and stylistic traits.  The museum’s specimen had been uncovered during authorised excavations by the Italian Superintendency at the Etruscan sanctuary of Campetti Nord in the autumn of 1937 — a site previously worked over by tombaroli.

The sanctuary lies within the ancient urban area of Veio, also known as Veii, one of the major cities of Etruria and a formidable rival to early Rome. Its ruins rest quietly near the medieval village of Isola Farnese, about fifteen kilometers northwest of Italy's capital, amid the rolling hills and woodlands of what is now the Veio Regional Park.  For archaeologists, the city is a treasure of discovery, offering rare insight into the architecture, rituals, and daily life of the Etruscans on the frontier between the  Etruscan and Latin worlds.

After much finagling, the story of the first looted antefix was brought to light in an art crime documentary Lot 448, directed by Bella Monticelli which highlighted the objects lack of legitimate paperwork or export license and which exposed how difficult it is to identify and document an object with only a few days notice before an appraching sale.  Fortunately, with some help from Bulgari SpA, (who purchased the artefact at auction and donated it, through the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism, to the Italian State) the 2019 auctioned dancing maenad joined her sister at the National Etruscan Museum of Villa Giulia, reunited with other ancient artworks from the same archaeological context from which both figures originated.

Fast forward to a 2nd Christie's Antquities auction, scheduled for later this month and it seems we have a third headless lady dancer from Veio. 


The provenance for this third Etruscan antefix, equally headless, but less intact reads:  Elsa Bloch-Diener (1922-2012), Bern, 1975 (Antike Kunst, no. 113).

If you look carefully, by her feet you can make out the hoof of the Silenos this lady would have been dancing with.  

This detail is remarkably similar to the antefix in the form of a Maenad and Silenos Dancing which once graced the cover of the exhibition catalog A Passion for Antiquities: Ancient Art from the Collection of Barbara and Lawrence Fleishman.  

After careful restoration that antefix was first seen on the market with Robert Hecht who sold it to the Hunt collection.  Next it was circulated via Sotheby's with that collection was liquidated and bought by Robin Symes, who immediately resold it to the Fleischmanns.  In1994 the couple exhibited the piece , along with their entire collection, at the J. Paul Getty Museum, before it was formally acquired by   the museum in 1996 (96.AD.33).  The piece was restituted to Italy after it was matched by Daniela Rizzo and Maurizio Pellegrino to a polaroid in the Giacomo Medici archive.  Like the one up for sale at Christie's now, both artefacts were broken along the lower half and when whole, depicted a Silenos dancing behind the Maenad.


Now let's look at the provenance the auction house has cited.

Elsa Bloch-Diener (1922–2012) was a Swiss art dealer who operated a gallery at Kramgasse 60 in the old town of Bern.  She is known to have collaborated with Ines Jucker (née Scherrer, 1922-2013), the scholar and sometimes ancient art dealer responsible for the exhibition catalogue Italy of the Etruscans, cited in the Christie’s lot description as an exhibition where this piece was on view to the public. 

Jucker not only authenticated works for Bloch-Diener but also curated the 1991 Etruscan exhibition at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem referenced in the Christie's sale.  Also contributing to that exhibition's catalogue were entries by Giovannangelo Camporeale, Fiorella Cottier-Angeli, George Ortiz, and Christoph Reusser, names that have, at times, prompted debate and concern within the field.

In May 2002, when Swiss and Italian authorities raided Gianfranco Becchina's Antike Kunst Palladion, as well as three of Becchina’s storage facilities in Basel, authorities seized documents which identified transactions between the Sicilian and Ines Jucker which documented that she purchased artefacts from this dealer and sold them onwards.

Along the same theme Jucker studied an Attic Red-Figured calyx krater signed by Syriskos (painter); donated by Lawrence Fleischman and his wife to the J. Paul Getty Museum which had been acquired from Robin Symes in 1988.  Pictured on Medici Polaroid it was restituted to Italy.   Likewise a Black-Figure Cup Fragment with the Capture of Silenus in the Tondo which Jucker sold to Dietrich von Bothmer was also returned to Italy.

In the Israel exhibition Jucker curated, which featured the antefix up for auction and identified it as coming from the ancient site of Veio, some four hundred Etruscan objects were presented, none of large format, some with an inscriptions.  Among them were small bronzes, ceramics, jewellery, terracottas (architectural, votive, and cinerary urns), and sculptural fragments in nenfro.  In total they represented all periods and regions of Etruscan art. 

The main nucleus of the Israel displayed ensemble came from the collection of the late Ivor and Flora Svarc, many of whose holdings would be donated to the Israel Museum.  Svarc's objects were complemented by pieces already in Israeli collections, along with loans from the collector-dealer Jonathan Rosen and other private collectors, mainly in Switzerland.  

As cited by Drs David Gill and Christopher Chippindale in Material Consequences of Contemporary Classical Collecting the vast majority of the artefacts exhibited during this exhibition were previously unpublished.  This made this public display of the items their first concretising stop towards having an art marketable pedigree. 

The fact that we know this object comes from the context of Veio, can also be found in the same catalogue as the restituted Getty atefix, A Passion for Antiquities: Ancient Art from the Collection of Barbara and Lawrence Fleishman.


Page 197 refers specifically to the artefact currently up for auction:

A number of fragmentary examples of antefixes of this type, as well as of molds for producing them, have come to light at Civita Castellana (Falerii) (see Andrén; Sprenger/Bartoloni), finds which clearly prove their local manufacture. But the votive deposit of Campetti at Veii has yielded the head of a silenos of identical type and made of Veian clay (see Vagnetti 1971), which led P. J. Riis to suggest that this type of antefix was invented at Veii. The lower half of an antefix of this type with a provenance from Veii is in a private collection in Switzerland (see Jucker), and similar fragments have recently been excavated in Rome (see Cristo fani). 

With that in mind, it is necessary to return to the same question previously directed at Christie’s: 

On what evidentiary basis, supported by what verifiable documentation, did the auction house authorise the consignment of this artefact?  In the absence of any demonstrable chain of custody or export records, the decision to green-light its sale raises serious concerns regarding the robustness of the auction house’s internal due diligence procedures.


In this case, the question is not rhetorical but fundamental. Is Christie’s in possession of any concrete paperwork supporting the legitimacy of this Dancing Maenad’s appearance on the market, or was the absence of evidence simply overlooked given its publication in an exhibition, in the hope that the object’s passage through the auction process would escape closer scrutiny.


By:  Lynda Albertson

September 4, 2025

A Still Life in Buenos Aires: Misattribution, Mystery, and Nazi-Era Shadows

In examining the case of Nazi SS officer Friedrich Gustav Kadgien’s paintings, ARCA has been piecing together a troubling picture.  Earlier, we discussed photographs shared on social media by his daughter, Patricia Kadgien.  In this article we will take a closer look at some of the images we have been analysing, along with others we have explored as this case hit the public airwaves.


We already knew that one of the paintings, which came into the possession of the German official was a still life painting depicting a crowded display of peaches and other fruit, a bird's nest, insects and a lizard.  From World War II era documentation, we also know that this oil painting is said to have been painted by the German artist Abraham Mignon (1640–1679), and is also being searched for as a World War II-era loss which has been registered with the Dutch Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed

In our initial forway into the life Kadgien, ARCA grabbed a number of photos from Patricia Kadgien's Facebook page before she and other members of the family set their socials to private.  Three of them, varying in quality, captured a still life oil painting, but only partially in view, as in each photo the painting was obscured by  people in the frame.  

Despite this, key details, such as the cluster of peaches aligned perfectly with the known description, as well as the black and white photo, of the missing painting on record in the Dutch archive. 

As you can see by the date stamp in this photo, Kadgien's daughter uploaded this family portrait to her social media profile on 1 September 2011. It cannot be confirmed that this photo was actually taken in 2011, only that it was uploaded in 2011 as Facebook retains all metadata and adds more, but none of it is available to any end users who might download said image. 

Fast forward to yesterday's Argentinian news reports discussing the fact that there is a remarkably similar artwork in the collection of the Museo Nacional de Arte Decorativo in Buenos Aires.  That artwork has been attributed to a Dutch still-life painter from the northern Netherlands named Rachel Ruysch, not Mignon, who was just a teenager when the older still life painter died. 

Having said that, it is important to note that the attribution of a painting is seldom a definitive process in the absence of a signature or other reliable documentation, and may be reassessed at any stage.  The work in question might have arrived to Argentina from Europe or elsewhere, possibly identified (whether correctly or not), as a painting made by Mignon, and subsequently reattributed thorough study at the museum, or perhaps even earlier by research commissioned by its painting's previous owner.  

Combing through a series of open source websites and archives, we were able to find multiple uploaded images of the "Ruysch-named" painting in the museum's oak-cladded antecámara.  Unfortunately, the earliest instance we have of corresponding images of said work, in said placement inside the museum, date back to 2007 four years before Patricia Kadgein uploaded a still life image to her Facebook profile.

 

In the photos we found or the antecámara, posted the 2000s, the center of the room is occupied by a sculpture by Joseph Pollet. On both sides of the entrance doors are two Dutch oil paintings: the Portrait of a Gentleman by J. C. Verspronck and the Still Life by Rachel Ruysch.  The latter of which also appears in a 2003 museum publication, without a photo or provenance, stating that the Ruysch painting was donated in 1960.   

Other sources state that the painting was bequeathed in 1962 and 1964. 

What is the actual donation date?

The first time the Wayback Machine captures a description of this artwork on the  museum's own web page was saved on 8 April 2008.  On said page, the museum discusses at length, the artist and the subject of the painting, but omits any provenance details or who bequeathed the painting.  Curiously though, it lists the oil painting's dimensions as "0.68 m x 0.65 m., which is practically a square. 

Outlined in blue for comparison are the dimensions of the stolen Mignon-attributed painting registered in the Netherlands (outlined in red).  In blue we have listed the sized attributed to the Rachel Ruysch painting by the museum. As is plainly visible, there is a rather substantial proportion discrepancy in the size documented on the museum's web page.  And while the Mignon-attributed painting archived with the RCE is recorded as matching in height, the painting in Argentina is slightly wider.  If the two paintings are a match, then perhaps the stolen painting was measured previously using the dimensions inside its frame at the time. 

Zooming in on one of the photographs we also reviewed and overlapped the frame visible in Patricia Kadgien's Facebook photo, which appears to be similar to the frame of the painting in the Buenos Aires museum, even if the resolution isn't high enough to ascertain with complete certainty if there is a match.

Using the same overlay technique, and a clearer image of the painting straight on, we can compare both the frame of the painting in the museum's antecámara and the frame of the painting from Patricia Kadgien's Facebook page. 

We can also compare other images the museum uploaded in 2020 of the entire "Ruysch-named" painting, contrasting them with the black and white photo in the archive of the painting archived with the Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed in the Netherlands. 


Side by side we can see that both paintings depict the same identical subject. But proportionately could they be one and the same?  To examine the artwork further, ARCA overlayed the RCE's black and white photo with one of the museum's more recent medium resolution images.


We again repeated the process using as smaller photograph uploaded to the museum's socials which captured a close up of the painting's peaches, bird's nest, and lizard.


In our humble opinion, we suspect that this.is.clearly.the.same.painting,  
regardless of which artist the painting has been attributed to.  

Taking our hypothesis one step further, and  also looked at historic photos.  

This 1918 archive photograph of the Errázuriz Palace, (where the museum is located) doesn't show the still life painting in question in the antecámara of the residence, once owned by the Chilean ambassador to Argentina.  Matias Errazuriz, lived in the mansion with his wife Josefina de Alvear before the property was gifted to the state. 

Nor is the still life to be found in archival photos which show objects from the original Errázuriz family collection which were to become part of the founding purchase by the nation when the mansion was transferred over to the Argentina via the National Assembly of the Autonomous Communities when the museum opened in 1937.

What we did not find was any open source documentation or images that confirm that this painting was part of the museum's collection from the time of its purported donation in 1960, 1962 or 1964, until its first contemporary appearance in digital photos and on the museum's website from the 2000s.  Where are the photos over that 40 year interim? 


Unanswered questions, at least for now

Are there any photos of the Still Life by Rachel Ruysch from the time of its donation until the 2000s? 

What confirmatory paperwork does the Museo de Arte Decorativo have that concretises when their painting's donation actually occurred.

What confirmatory paperwork does the Museo de Arte Decorativo have that demonstrates the artwork's ownership history, and from whose hands it pasted from the time of its creation through to the date of the museum's aquisiton?

What details does the Museo de Arte Decorativo have on the donor of the Still Life by Rachel Ruysch painting, and what was this person's relationship to the museum, and what (if any) does this individual or their family have with problematic works of art in circulation during, or after, World War II. 

Is there a link between this painting's arrival in Argentina and the Kadgien family’s activities in Argentina before or after the war?

For now, we are left with more questions than clarity. But one thing is clear: this is not just a story about one contested painting that the Kadgien family kept, despite its reprehensible past. Nor is it even about one family. 

It is emblematic of a broader, unresolved legacy. The postwar years saw countless works of art wrenched away from their rightful owners under duress which were subsequently laundered into “respectable” collections, sometimes even into public museums and institutions. Too often, provenance was overlooked in favour of prestige.

And so, decades later, we are still asking uncomfortable questions. How many of these works remain hidden in plain sight, misattributed, or deliberately misrepresented?  How many institutions prefer to avert their eyes rather than confront their own role in housing suspect objects which might have ties to Nazi looting? 

On principle alone, the opportunity exists, even belatedly, for families and museum personnel to reckon with these histories. To ignore that is to perpetuate the sins of the past.

By:  Lynda Albertson and Alice Bientinesi

NB:  This article was updated on 16 September 2025 with additional details.

September 2, 2025

577 Antiquities Seized: Minya looting case exposes ongoing threats to Egypt’s heritage

Egyptian authorities report the seizure of 577 artefacts in the Minya governorate in Upper Egypt, spanning the Middle Kingdom, Late Period, and Greco-Roman eras of ancient Egyptian history. 

The operation was conducted by the General Administration of Tourism and Antiquities Investigations, coordinated with the Public Security Sector and the Criminal Investigation Department, under the oversight of senior law enforcement officers Major General Mohamed Ragab and Major General Mohamed Zein. As a result of this investigation, a search warrant was executed not far from Lotus University at the residence of Islam A.M., an appliance dealer.  This resulted in the recovery of this large grouping of artefacts ,as well as the arrest of their intended seller, whose name was not given in full.

The ancient objects seized include this decorated 60-centimeter painted and gessoed wooden statue of a woman carrying offerings on her head, a cylindrical wooden image of Bes, the fertility god, and a basalt statue of Horus, missing its head from ancient erosion. 

Other notable objects include a painted pottery statue, and a green stone carving depicting four women.  Wood and faience ushabti figures suggest that at least some of the artefacts were looted from funerary contexts. 

In addition to these, 503 silver and bronze coins, were discovered, pointing to a diverse cache of both ritual and utilitarian items. 

According to Egyptian news sites, preliminary evaluation by antiquities inspectors confirm the authenticity of the artefacts seized as well as their protection under Egypt’s Antiquities Protection Law No. 117 of 1983. 

Following his arrest, the suspect confessed to prospecting and illegal excavations in the Zawiya Sultan area, an archaeologically rich but vulnerable region east of the Nile. His admission underscores the continuing role of subsistence digging and opportunistic looting in feeding the illicit trade. 

Like many such cases, the looter's intent was to sell the objects on the black market, where demand for Egyptian antiquities internationally remains high, forcing looters to plunder remote locations or utilise creative means to avoid having their illicit excavation activities detected.

In 2024 residents of Minya Governorate, especially those who bury their contemporary loved ones in the cemeteries in Zawiyat Sultan, Al-Matahira, and the Cairo-Assiut Desert Road, complained to the authorities that thieves were stealing the metal doors of tombs and that graves were being broken into.  It was discovered that gaining access to these modern internment spaces allowed looters to dig deep holes undetected in search of antiquities. 

The richness of the Minya Governorate is well known. In April 2017, Nedjemankh’s famous golden coffin flew to New York on American Airlines after it was looted from the Minya region in October 2011. 

In 2016, A'srāwy Kāmel Jād, a site guard was shot dead by looters, while a second watchman, Ali Khalaf Shāker, who was also on duty was gravely wounded and succumbed to his injuries later.  The pair had been on duty protecting Deir el-Bersha an archaeological site located on the east bank of the Nile, south of Hermopolis, which is part of the same governorate. 

For those thinking of taking up looting as a hobby, it should be remembered that Article 41 of Egypt's antiquities law stipulates that anyone who smuggles an antiquity out of the country or participates in smuggling it shall be punished by hard labor and a fine of no less than 5,000 Egyptian pounds and no more than 50,000 Egyptian pounds. Article 42 stipulates that anyone who steals or conceals an antiquity or part of an antiquity owned by a state shall be punished by imprisonment for a period of no less than 5 years.


Restitution Delayed, Injustice Prolonged: Kadgien family intends to drag the ownership claim of "Portrait of a Lady" stolen from Jacques Goudstikker into Argentine Civil Court

According to attorney Carlos Murias, representing Patricia Kadgien and her husband Juan Carlos Cortegoso, the eldest daughter of Nazi SS officer Friedrich Gustav Kadgien now intends to drag the ownership dispute over Giuseppe Vittore Ghislandi’s Portrait of a Lady, a painting stolen from Jewish art dealer Jacques Goudstikker during World War II, into Argentina’s civil courts.  This manoeuvre, rather than confronting the documented history of looting, appears designed to stall restitution and shield Kadgien’s heirs from accountability, perpetuating the very injustices that allowed Nazi plunder during World War II to remain in circulation in private hands.

The case began after Dutch reporters announced they had identified the stolen painting from a published real estate photo which depicted the artwork hanging inside Patricia Kadgien's residence at Padre Cardiel 4152 in the Mar del Plata neighbourhood.  Around the same time, a complaint from the Customs Collection and Control Agency attached to the Buenos Aires Customs House was opened for the alleged crime of concealing smuggling, and a search of the property was authorised by the Mar del Plata Court of Guarantees No. 2 at the request of Carlos Martínez, a prosecutor with the Federal Court's Office for Simple Crimes. 

According to Argentine law, search warrants of this type must be notified, at the time of their execution, to the owner or possessor, or failing that, to any adult present at the premises, preferably the relatives of the former, inviting them to witness said search.  This explains the presence of Patricia Mónica Kadgien and Juan Carlos Cortegoso's lawyer over the five hours when the Mar del Plata Special Investigations Unit executed their search at the home.

Once the house search had been carried out, the prosecutor was required to draw up a report recording the outcome of the search, noting all circumstances that may be of importance to the case.  This report was then signed by all those involved in the search.

As we know from journalistic reports last week, by this point in time the family had intentionally moved the stolen painting elsewhere, replacing its place on the wall with a large carpet.

In a statement given to the daily Spanish-language newspaper La Capital, by the family's attorney, Murias, said "Technically, the painting is being filed as a result of a judicial process. It is being filed in the Civil Court, which we consider competent to resolve this matter, not in the Criminal Court, in the context of an alleged complaint filed by Arca for a crime that my client is allegedly being charged with for 'covering up smuggling..."

Yesterday, Patricia Kadgien and her husband were placed under house arrest for 72 hours while the case remained under investigation by federal prosecutor Carlos Martínez.  Police confirm an additional three searches have been carried out at addresses in and around Buenos Aires, including one at an apartment located at Calle Santa Fe 1700.  In the interim, the judge assigned to this case has ordered that the summary of these actions be kept sealed for 48 hours, meaning we will have to wait to know what details and evidence was found during these other searches at homes linked to Kadgien and the couple’s relatives.

As of now, neither Friedrich Kadgien's daughter nor his son in law, has been charged in the criminal court with obstructing a police investigation for what appears, at least  on the surface, to have been the intentional removal of the Ghislandi painting to impede its seizure.  Yet, the deeper question persists: why continue to shield and deny, when the opportunity exists to make amends? Especially given Patricia Kadgien was just thirteen when her father died. 

On principle alone, one might expect her or her sister Alicia Maria Kadgien to step forward, to repudiate the sins of their father, and to return what was stolen.  Imagine having the chance to reconcile, even in a small way, with history’s injustices, and the things your family did, only to choose instead to perpetuate them.

3 September 2025 Update: Argentina’s Federal Attorney General Daniel Adler announced that the painting  "Portrait of a Lady" stolen from Jacques Goudstikker has been placed under protection after Argentine Judge Patricia Noemí Juárez, of the 11th Civil Court, held that after analyzing the elements incorporated into the case and a hearing held with the Federal Prosecutor, "I must conclude that the ordinary jurisdiction is not competent to intervene in a case where the Federal Justice is ultimately pursuing the seizure of a work of art with an alleged illicit origin."

August 28, 2025

Six Months for 590 Artefacts: The Case of U.S.-Egyptian Smuggler Ashraf Omar Eldarir

Ashraf Omar Eldarir has recieved a six month prison sentence in US Federal court. 

ARCA has written a lot about Eldarir, a naturalised U.S. citizen from Brooklyn.   The first time was back in 2022 after he was indicted in the United States District Court, Eastern District of New York, on two counts of smuggling, under Title 18 U.S. Code § 545, 2 and 3551 et seq. after he flew into John F. Kennedy International Airport on from an international flight from Egypt with three suitcases filled from top to bottom with illicit antiquities wrapped in protective packaging.

In our second article we published an open source list of many of the Egyptian artefacts actively in circulation on the US and European markets which were traceable to Eldarir, reminding buyers that Caveat Emptor, if the name on the collecting history of their Egyptian artefacts included any of these names or combinations of stories they were likely to be looted.

⇏ Ashraf Omar Eldarir (see our earlier post today).
⇏ Anything with any spelling that says something like ex-private Ezeldeen Taha Eldarir collection; ex-Salahaddin Sirmali collection.
⇏ Anything with "formerly Collection Salah al-Din Sarmali Bey. Acquired by Izz al-Din Tah al-Darir Bey in Egypt.

In our third story, we examined how the insatiable U.S. demand for Egyptian antiquities between 2012 until 2020, and the ease with which illicit pieces could be laundered into the licit market and resold, often for substantial sums—created fertile ground for smugglers like Mr. Eldarir.  We also expanded our growing list of his identifiable imports and published an example of one of his forged provenance letters, and raised the obvious elephant-in-the-room question: catching one man with 590 artefacts in his suitcases is one thing, but what about the 'don’t ask, don’t tell' dealers and auction houses who eagerly absorbed his material into the supply chain? Eldarir’s scheme relied on fabricated attestation letters and never once produced an export license or verifiable proof of ownership, yet the ancient art market had welcomed his goods all the same.

In February 2025 we reported that after a prolonged federal court case, Eldarir had finally elected to do what most federally charged individuals tend to (eventually) do.  Knowing he stood a snowball's chance in hell of being found not guilty, the former doctor-turned-smuggler pleaded out, admitting that he had smuggled ancient Egyptian artefacts into the United States over a series of trips to and from his home country.  In theory, for his role in these affairs, US sentencing guidelines estimated that he could serve as many as three to five years behind bars and might even face denaturalisation, which could send him back to the very country that he so prolifically robbed.

ARCA continued to ask what happened to these two high value pieces sold through Christie's to a dealer in Switzerland. 

One was this portrait head of a man, sold first through Christies New York in 2012 for $52,500.  Despite the trafficker's arrest in the US, this piece was still up for sale during the COVID-affected TEFAF Maastricht art fair in 2020, at the stand of Swiss dealer, Jean David Cahn.  Here the piece was called "a Portrait Head of the Emperor Severus Alexander" with a price on request. 


A second, was also present at TEFAF at Cahn's stand: a Double Life sized Ptolemaic Royal Portrait Possibly Ptolemy III Euergetes.  

To close this story, yesterday Joseph Nocella, Jr., United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York; announced that Judge Rachel P. Kovner had sentenced Ashraf Omar Eldarir to six months in prison.  

In much of the reporting around this case, some journalists have zeroed in on the fact that the British Museum once purchased an Eldarir-smuggled ushabti through Mousa Khouli’s Palmyra Heritage, a New York gallery run by a convicted trafficker of Egyptian cultural property.  It makes for easy headlines: the BM’s missteps are as consumable in the press as gossip about the British royal family.

But what most of those articles miss is the quieter truth, that it was not scandal but diligence that first turned the tide. Staff at the British Museum recognised that the ushabti in question could be tied directly to a known looting incident in Egypt. Rather than turn a blind eye, this staffer flagged their concerns to law enforcement, providing a crucial lead that put Eldarir on the radar of U.S. authorities.

Forensic investigations often depend on this kind of vigilance: the quiet, careful work of scholars who hardly ever make the headlines, but whose interventions are critical in making cases viable.  In this instance, the unsung hero was not a prosecutor, a journalist, or an independent scholar, but a museum professional working to keep their own museum clean, and who refused to ignore the red flags of objects under their care. 

I for one think they deserve our thanks.

By:  Lynda Albertson

August 27, 2025

Swastikas, SOCMINT and Stolen Masterpieces: Inside the Hunt for Goudstikker’s Lost Art in Argentina

On Monday, the internet lit up after Algemeen Dagblad published an explosive investigation by Peter Schouten, John van den Oetelaar, and Cyril Rosman, revealing the identification of two World War II-era paintings linked to the family of Friedrich Gustav Kadgien, sparking renewed attention to Nazi-looted art hidden abroad.  Kadgien, a Nazi SS officer, served as Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring’s liaison with Swiss banks in his work connected with Germany's Vierjahresplan before splitting for Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay as Germany lost the war.

Friedrich Kadgien's visa for Uruguay.

Building on this revelation, ARCA released its own article yesterday, outlining some of our parallel research into the tragic losses of Amsterdam dealer Jacques Goudstikker, as well as tracing a brief outline of Kadgien’s movements before and after his escape to South America.  As the case remained a developing one, we discussed only the general outlines of our own OSINT and SOCMINT explorations,  in order to give Kadgien's relatives time to respond. 

Today, journalists Schouten and Rosman reported that federal prosecutor Carlos Martínez has opened a case of concealment of smuggling, in cooperation with INTERPOL and the Policía Federal ArgentinaAs a result of this investigation law enforcement officers from Mar del Plata's Special Investigations Unit executed a search warrant, authorised by the Mar del Plata Court of Guarantees No. 2, which was carried out at a home in Mar del Plata in search of the 17th century painting Portrait of a Lady by Giuseppe Vittore Ghislandi, looted during World War II.  Kadgien 's youngest daughter, accompanied by her husband and lawyer, were present during the search.

During the police raid, investigators discovered that the family had removed the artwork, leaving its current whereabouts unknown.  Where it had hung on the wall, a tapestry with a horse had been hung.  Despite this, more than 25 prints from German and French collections from the 1940s were seized, along with relevant documentation, two cell phones, a revolver, and a shotgun.

This painting, by Italian artist Giuseppe Ghislandi, was stolen from Jacques Goudstikker's collection when the Jewish Dutch art dealer fled the Netherlands as it was invaded by Nazi Germany

This case got underway after the artwork depicting Cecilia Colleoni had been discovered in a photograph uploaded for a Robles Casas & Campos real estate advertisement.  The image depicted the 17th century countess behind a green couch next to a wooden and glass tile coffee table, which unfortunately, by mistake or design, forms the shape of a swastika, an ancient religious symbol, adopted by Adolf Hitler to represent the German Reich

The Nazi used the right facing form of a swastika at an angle of 45 degrees
with the corners pointing upwards.

Shortly after the news broke in Europe this week, Robles Casas & Campos removed the photos and changed the Mar del Plata housing listing to another property in barrio Parque Luro located 5 km away. Reviewing documents for Argentine companies listed as Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada ARCA found that the original Buenos Aires home, located at Padre Cardiel 4152, Mar del Plata, was owned, and/or occupied, by Kadgien's younger daughter, Patricia Mónica Kadgien and her partner Juan Carlos Cortegoso.  

As the story gained steam within the international press, Patricia Kadgien, who had already stopped communicating with the Dutch journalists, switched all of her social media channels private, as did other relatives and former employees of the family.  As an added precaution, Kadgien, also changed her online name from Patricia Kadgien to Monica Cortegoso.  

But before these changes were made, ARCA had already captured a series of photos posted by the former SS officer's daughter, which were of two additional artworks. 

One was described by the Dutch journalists as a still life painting depicting a crowded display of peaches and other fruit, a bird's nest, insects and a lizard.  This oil painting is believed to have been completed by the German artist Abraham Mignon (1640–1679), and was also being searched for as a World War II era loss by the Dutch Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed

ARCA captured a grouping of images of this artwork posted on Kadgien's socials in 2011, which showed what is believed to be the Mignon painting displayed behind three individuals.  While the wall-mounted light illuminating the painting from above causes the artwork to be out of focus, we could clearly see three peaches poking through. 

Still life painting by Abraham Mignon which was known to have been purchased by Friedrich Gustav Kadgien, a lawyer responsible for foreign currency procurement through Swiss front companies for the Vierjahresplan.

While the visibility of the painting published in that social media post was quite limited, the three pieces of visible fruit depicted in the social media uploaded photo are consistent with the three peaches in the black and white image of Mignon's artwork recorded in the Netherlands online ‘Cultural Goods WWII’ portal.  This can be seen with our rudimentary overlay below. This painting was also not found during this initial police search warrant.


In other explorations, ARCA captured another blurry photograph, this time of a religious artwork posted by Patricia Kadgien hanging above two twin beds inside a second residence located near the Costa Esmeralda - Barrio Deportiva some distance from Buenos Aires.  While the photograph of this third artwork was taken from a distance, and was not in perfect focus, it clearly showed a religious scene of the Blessed Mother and Christ child hung on a wall above the headboards of two twin beds.

Discovered 3rd painting in a rental residence advertised by Kadgien's daughter.  

This artwork corresponds to the iconography of several paintings titled La Vierge aux raisins (The Virgin with the grapes) attributed to, or executed in the style of, Pierre Mignard.  This allegorical composition depicts Mary seated in a darkened room at twilight with her infant son on her lap and holding a cluster of grapes in her right hand.  

The painting's imagery is understood to be a foreshadowing of the Virgin's role at the Wedding Feast at Cana, as well as the sacrifice of the Cross. In this scene, the artist painted the Christ Child delicately lifts his mother's veil, an action which has been interpreted as a prefiguration of his unveiling of the path to mankind's salvation.

Paintings of this type are sometimes referred to as "Mignardes," after their original author, and were intended for private devotion.  One of Mignard's original oil paintings illustrating this subject is housed in the Musée du Louvre.  Unfortunately, there are multiple versions of this artwork, by the original artist, his peers, and by later copyists, so for now at least, it remains unclear whether or not the work can be traced to a specific  World War II-era loss.


By late Monday, 25 August 2025, as was the case with the digitally available photo of Ghislandi's Portrait of the Countess, someone acting in the family's interests, scrubbed the suspect photo displaying the Madonna with Child painting from the internet.  However other images depicting the interior and exterior of this second residence, uploaded in different years, demonstrated that the property was still under Patricia Kadgien's control, at least in the year 2023. 


Two of the original images ARCA captured from a 2019 posting before the take-downs occurred, showed the exterior of this property.  One of these corresponds to a newer December 2023 photo uploaded by Kadgien's daughter which depicts the same house, showing a portion of the same veranda and the same white table. 


This third artwork can also be seen in this local Ahora Mar del Plata news site photo, showing that it was seized along with other suspect works when the search warrant was executed.  This painting and these other works on paper, will now need to be sifted through, though we can already see that some of the prints appear to be part of the Henri Matisse. Seize peintures 1939-1943, a First Edition set of 16 Prints
Published by Les Editions du Chene in Paris in 1943. 


For now, the Portrait of a Lady by Giuseppe Vittore Ghislandi has not been recovered.  Nor, it seems, has the other high value still life by Abraham Mignon.  One has to hope that Patricia, her husband, her sister Alicia Maria Kadgien or other members of the family, will cooperate more with police and prosecutors than they did with the journalists covering this evolving and long time coming story. 


By Lynda Albertson and Alice Bientinesi


August 25, 2025

Diamonds and Dispossessed Art: The Friedrich Gustav Kadgien connection to the Goudstikker collection

"Portrait of a Woman" from the Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed website.
As readers of this blog know, Jacques Goudstikker was once considered to be the preeminent dealer of Old Master paintings in Amsterdam and is estimated to have amassed an extraordinary collection of some 1400 works of art over the course of his professional career.  When Germany began its assault on Holland on May 10, 1940, the Jewish dealer was acutely aware of the imminent threat to his family’s safety and livelihood.

With Rotterdam burning and as the Nazi invasion under Reichsmarschall Göring gaining speed, Goudstikker, took his young wife Désirée von Halban Kurtz, and their infant son Edouard, to IJmuiden in North Holland, where the family boarded the SS Bodegraven, a ship docked at the port city departing for England. 

Goudstikker inventory of property

Unable to transport his gallery's paintings with him, Goudstikker carried a neatly typed inventory of his property in a black leather notebook.  This notebook detailed artworks by important Dutch and Flemish artists like Jan Mostaert and Jan Steen, as well as works by Peter Paul Rubens, Giotto, Pasqualino Veneziano, Titian, Rembrandt, Vincent van Gogh, and the Cranachs.  Unfortunately, in a further tragic twist of fate, Goudstikker lost his life on his journey to safety, breaking his neck in an accidental fall through an uncovered hatch just two days into the ship's voyage.

In less than a week after the German Luftwaffe of the Third Reich crossed into Dutch airspace, Dutch commanding general General Henry G. Winkelman surrendered and the country fell under German occupation.  As a result, Amsterdam came under a civilian administration overseen by the Reichskommissariat Niederlande, which was dominated by the Schutzstaffel.  

Goudstikker's collection was quickly liquidated, taken under circumstances of vulnerability and displacement typical of many World War II -era art thefts.  Nazi Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring himself cherry picked many of the choicest gems, including two 6-1/4 foot (1.9 meters) tall panels of Adam and Eve by Lucas Cranach the Elder, which would become the subject of a protracted and painful multi-million dollar lawsuit with the Norton Simon Museum in California.

But today's story is not about the Cranachs, but about a painting by Giuseppe Vittore Ghislandi, (better known as Fra’ Galgario), an Italian painter from the early 1700s. 

In the aftermath of World War II, the Goudstikker family sought to rebuild their life and secure what remained of their assets with several works becoming part of broader restitution claims. This painting, titled simply Portrait of a Lady was one of the works seized by the Nazis from Jacques Goudstikker's art gallery in Amsterdam and was last traced to Friedrich Gustav Kadgien, a lawyer responsible for foreign currency procurement through Swiss front companies, and who acted as  Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring's liaison with Swiss banks for the Vierjahresplan.  

Brazilian identity card for "Federico Gustavo" Kadgien

As the Allies crossed the Rhine, in the east and the Red Army advanced on Berlin Kadgien, a member of the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (since 1 November 1932) and the SS since 1935, was responsible for Germany's war economy.  But despite his high ranking position, he fled to Switzerland, crossing the German-Swiss border near Kreuzlingen just days before Germany's official surrender.  There he lived, for several years, for the most part sheltered and under the radar.  Germany lost the war, and the former SS officer began using his contacts with Swiss businessmen and banks for his own purposes.  

Much later, the Bergier commission will identify him as being connected to the newly renamed firm Imhauka Handels- und Finanzierungs-gesellschaft AG, a finance and trading firm formed with Ernst Imfeld and Ludwig Haupt, hence the letters IM-HAU-KA, that had branches in Tangier, Buenos Aires, and Rio de Janeiro. This firm is believed to have made it possible for the Germans to move money, fuel, diamonds, and apparently art, out of Europe.

 The motor vessel "Anna C" docked in Genoa for Buenos Aires 

Interrogated by the American authorities in Bern, in 1948, who wanted him extradited back to Germany, Kadgien skipped town to Latin America.  To do so he  hopped the passenger ship, "Anna C" (1948 - 1971) docked in the port of Genoa and headed to Buenos Aires.  Once in that South American country, he settled, found himself a younger wife, bred and rode horses, and founded Imhauka Argentina, with branches in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro, as well as the Companhia Brasileira de Caldeiras.  


Little is known about his company's activities but Kadgien's wealth was enormous, sufficient in fact to allow him and Ludwig Haupt to acquire an 82,000 hectare fazenda, a parcel of land roughly the size of the city of Berlin, on a curve of the Taquari-Guaçu river.  Some speculate that the German bon vivant's wealth came from laundering the German war chest and that he financed coups in Colombia (1953) and Guatemala (1954), using the proceeds from confiscated diamonds taken from their owners in Antwerp during the war.

A house and private plane on Kadgien's 82,000 hectare fazenda.

In Argentina his network of companies functioned perfectly even after the war and not long after he was granted Argentine citizenship, which conveniently protected him from being extradited to Germany.  He died in Buenos Aires in 1978 at the age of seventy one, without ever being held accountable for any of his crimes.

Today in an article published by Algemeen Dagblad and written collaboratively by Peter Schouten, John van den Oetelaar and Cyril Rosman, it became publicly known that at least one stolen World War II-era painting from Jacques Goudstikker's collection apparently made its way with Kadgien to Argentina.

© Robles Casas & Campos

The painting depicting the Countess Cecilia Colleoni by Ghislandi was identified when one of the former SS Officer's two daughters listed her house in Mar del Plata, south of Buenos Aires, with the Robles Casas & Campos real estate firm.  There, above a well-won green couch was the painting of a woman in a light coloured dress, laced at the front with half sleeves.  Examining the photograph, experts Annelies Kool and Perry Schrier of the Dutch Heritage Agency state: "There is no reason to believe it could be a copy." According to them, "The dimensions also appear to match the information we have. Definitive confirmation can be obtained by examining the back of the painting" noting that the verso may still retain markings or labels confirming its provenance.

Official documents on the Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed website and cited in the Dutch article reveal that Kadgien also owned (at least) two paintings from Amsterdam in 1946 which were at one point with the Jewish art dealer Goudstikker.  The second artwork is a still life painting with fruit by the German artist Abraham Mignon (1640–1679) described in this document. 

Like the Dutch journalists, ARCA was able to find photographs identifying this still life painting linking the artwork to Kadgien's living family members, via OSINT methods.  I was also able to discover a third painting, which may be a match to a painting by one of the most important portrait painters of the French Baroque.  That artwork was stolen from a museum in Germany at the end of the war.  If this third identification is also a match, that would bring the number of suspect paintings tied to this Second World War actor to at least three. 

A 1996 Swiss Independent Commission of Experts investigating Switzerland’s role in the Nazi period noted SS Friedrich Kadgien as a lawyer at the Nazi Public Economy Department during the Second World War. According to that report, "Kadgien had been heavily involved in criminal methods for acquiring currency, securities and diamonds stolen from Jewish victims playing a major role."

Jacques Goudstikker's heirs have stated that they will seek the return of the Countess painting.  Time will tell with the other two. 


By:  Lynda Albertson