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德国媒体近日报道,2011年春天,德国海关官员在慕尼黑一公寓内发现了一批约1500件在二战期间被纳粹没收的失踪艺术品。其中不乏毕加索、马蒂斯、夏加尔等名师画作,总价值估计达10亿欧元。公寓主人叫康内琉斯·古利特。这一发现被称为是“二战以来失踪艺术品领域最伟大的发现之一”。同时,人们也对这些“失踪”名画的来龙去脉产生好奇。在犹太人与艺术界人士压力下,德国政府逐步公开了这些名画“失而复得”的细节。
German media recently reported that in the spring of 2011, German customs officials found a group of about 1,500 missing pieces of art confiscated by the Nazis during World War II in an apartment in Munich. Many of them are Picasso, Matisse, Chagall and other master paintings, the total estimated value of 1 billion euros. The owner of the apartment is Cornelius Gullit. This discovery is known as “one of the greatest discoveries in the field of missing artwork since World War II”. At the same time, people also curious about the origin and origin of these “missing” paintings. Under the pressure of Jewish and artistic people, the German government has gradually released the details of these famous paintings.