'', August 1888 (destroyed by fire in the Second World War), formerly in the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum, Magdeburg (Germany) |alt=A man wearing a straw hat, carrying a canvas and paintbox, walking to the left, down a tree-lined, leaf-strewn country road There has been much scholarly speculation about van Gogh's relations with Jewish artists, including his tutor, Dr. M. B. Mendes da Costa, a Jewish teacher in Amsterdam. The complete number of van Gogh's Jewish collectors is unknown, in part because in the aftermath of the Holocaust the names of Jewish owners were often erased from the ownership history, or
provenance, in order to deny or falsify the true origins of artworks and make it difficult to connect the artworks to their former Jewish owners. Databases created to attempt to track the art lost during the Nazi terror include many van Goghs. Some of them have disappeared into private hands. Others have resurfaced in museums or at auctions and have been reclaimed, often in high profile lawsuits, by their former owners. ,
The Diggers, 1889 In 1999, Germany restituted a van Gogh drawing,
L’Olivette, to the only surviving heir of
Max Silberberg, a Jewish art collector from Breslau who died in a
Nazi concentration camp. Silberberg's 143 piece collection of impressionists, considered one of the finest private collections in Europe, was sold off in "Jew auctions" before he was killed. In 2006, the
Detroit Institute of Arts was faced with a claim for a van Gogh landscape called
The Diggers filed by Martha Nathan, originally of Frankfurt, Germany. The museum, which had been gifted the painting by the Detroit collector
Robert H. Tannahill, fought the claim, filing a declaratory action in the U.S. District Court in Detroit, requesting to be named as the painting's owner. In February 2012 an heir of
Margarete Mauthner, a German Jew forced into exile, made a claim for
Vue des Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer against the Swiss
Oskar Reinhart collection, following an earlier claim for ''Vue de l'asile et de la Chapelle de Saint-Rémy'' against the Hollywood movie star
Elizabeth Taylor. Before the Nazis' rise, the Jewish collector Mendelssohn-Bartholdy owned several magnificent van Goghs, including the iconic
Sunflowers, a landscape in Provence and
Madame Roulin and Her Baby, which is now in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. In December 2022 the heirs of the Mendelssohn-Bartholdy filed a lawsuit against the Japanese Insurance company who owned Sunflowers stating that it had been sold under duress and demanding its restitution. Van Gogh's
Langlois Bridge at Arles (Mu. number 5805) was seized from the Rothschild collection by the Nazis, recovered by the
Monuments Men and brought to the
Munich Central Collecting Point.
The Artist on the Road to Tarascon (1888), formerly housed in the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum, in Magdeburg, is believed to have been destroyed by fire during WWII. A drawing Van Gogh made of
Starry Night, to show his brother what the painting looked like, emerged in 1992 in the possession of the Russian government. The painting known as
Head of a Man, whose attribution to van Gogh is controversial, belonged to Richard Semmel before Nazi persecution forced him to sell. It ended up at
National Gallery of Victoria, against which Semmel's heirs filed a claim in 2013. It was restituted in 2014. In 2020
Malcolm Gladwell dedicated an episode of his Revisionist History podcast to the story van Gogh's
Vase with Carnations, which had been owned by German Jewish art dealers Albert and
Hedwig Ullmann, prior to World War II. They sold the van Gogh before fleeing Germany for Australia to escape the Nazis, and the painting eventually arrived at the
Detroit Institute of Arts. When the Ullmann family, which had changed its name to Ulin, located the painting, they requested it be returned, but the museum refused. Gladwell is critical of the museum's position, stating "It was impossible to be a German Jew after
Kristallnacht and to imagine you were safe". Though not Jewish, Koenigs fell to his death from a train platform in Cologne in a suspicious event that the family believes was executed by the Nazis. Dutch Jewish collector
Jacques Goudstikker, who died on the boat on which he was fleeing Holland, left behind an inventory of 1,113 paintings, including artwork by van Gogh. He was 42 years old. After Goudstikker's death the powerful Nazi
Hermann Goering would in 1940 take over Goudstikker's gallery inventory, in a transaction presented as a purchase. The name of the looted Goudstikker gallery was then used by Goering's art dealer Alois Miedl "to sell thousands of other artworks, many once belonging to Jews." In November 2021, a
Van Gogh painting that had belonged to
Max Meirowsky,
Meules de blé (1888), sold for $35 million at a Christies' auction after a three party restitution agreement involving the heirs of Max Meirowsky, Alexandrine de Rothschild, and representatives for Cox’s estate. ==German collections==