Dish

Anonymous

Item information

Dish

A 3649 (KN&V)
Applied art
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Reconstruction of provenance history

? <> 1939-06-07/08
: Dr Alfred Pringsheim (collection), Munich
:
: Museum inventory; see Sotheby's cat., London, 7-8 June 1939, nos. 13, 29, 42, 110, 125, 165, 188

1939-06-07/08
: Sotheby’s (auction), London
:
: Museum inventory; see Sotheby's cat., London, 7-8 June 1939, nos. 13, 29, 42, 110, 125, 165, 188

1939-06-07/08 <> 1941-11-13
: Jaap Bastert and Iet van Schaardenburg (collection), Loenen aan de Vecht (purchased at Sotheby’s, London, via Hein Hamer)
:
: Museum inventory

1941-11-13 <> 1948
: Stichting Administratiefonds Rotterdam [nl]
:
: Museum inventory

1948 <> heden
: Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (purchased from the collection by Rotterdam municipality)
:
: Stadsarchief Rotterdam, inv. 181.546 [nl]

Current restitution status

No requests

Research findings

This dish was owned by Alfred and Hedwig Pringsheim, a Jewish couple who sold their collection in 1939. They used the money from the sale to pay for their escape to Switzerland.

Since 1942 the museum has had seven majolica items from the former Pringsheim collection (first on loan in 1942, later in ownership in 1948). Alfred and Hedwig Pringsheim were German Jews who found it necessary in 1939 to sell the items in the collection not already confiscated by the Gestapo. They used part of the money they raised to escape to Zurich, Switzerland. These majolica pieces found their way via auctions in London into Jaap Bastert and Iet van Schaardenburg's collection, which the latter sold to 'Stichting Administratiefonds Rotterdam'. This foundation gave the objects on loan to Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen and sold them to Rotterdam municipality in 1948.