More art Found in Nazi Loot Probe

{{Dozens more art works have emerged at the Austrian home of Cornelius Gurlitt, the German collector found in 2012 with hundreds of paintings believed stolen by the Nazis.}}

The latest finds in Salzburg include paintings by Renoir, Monet and Picasso.

A spokesman for Mr Gurlitt, who is in his eighties, said experts were examining the works to see if they were stolen during the Nazi era.

“After an initial assessment that suspicion is not confirmed,” he said.

More than 1,400 art works estimated to be worth $1.35bn (£846m), were discovered in Mr Gurlitt’s apartment in Munich in March 2012. But details of the find only came to light last year, apparently during a routine tax inspection.

Hundreds of the paintings were believed to have been looted by the Nazis. Mr Gurlitt’s late father Hildebrand was a Nazi-era art dealer but kept many of the works himself.

A lawyer, Christoph Edel, who is acting as supervisor for Mr Gurlitt, has arranged for the works found at the collector’s Salzburg home to be secured from any break-in or theft, German news agency DPA reports.

BBC

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