Overview
- Police searched a Mar del Plata property after an Interpol alert but did not find the Ghislandi portrait linked to Jacques Goudstikker’s looted collection.
- Prosecutor Carlos Martínez said a tapestry now hangs where the painting appeared in listing photos, and officers seized German-era documents and two firearms.
- Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad spotted the artwork in a real estate listing believed to show a Kadgien family home; the agency removed the image and did not comment.
- Researchers at the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands say the photo likely shows the Ghislandi work, though confirmation requires inspecting the back of the canvas and other physical details.
- Records list Göring aide Friedrich Kadgien as last known owner in 1946 before he moved to Argentina, and while no charges have been filed, heirs led by Marei von Saher are preparing restitution efforts.