Treasures the Nazis stole that have never been found
Looted masterpieces still missing today

The painter on his way to work by Vincent Van Gogh

This masterpiece by Van Gogh features on the Monuments Men Foundation's most wanted list. The foundation was set up in 2007 in memory of the men and women of the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives programme, who recovered countless works of art stolen during World War II and whose story was told in the 2014 film The Monuments Men.
The painter on his way to work by Vincent Van Gogh

Elector John Frederick of Saxony by Cranach the Elder

Elector John Frederick of Saxony by Cranach the Elder

Portrait of a Man by Sandro Botticelli

Portrait of a Man by Sandro Botticelli

An Angel with Titus’ Features by Rembrandt

A failed artist who fancied himself as a critic and collector, Hitler was planning to create the Führermuseum, a major art gallery in Linz, Austria, which would have displayed the most important treasures stolen by the Third Reich (the picture shows the House of German Art, which he did have built in Munich). Among the artworks earmarked for the gallery was An Angel with Titus' Features by Rembrandt.
An Angel with Titus’ Features by Rembrandt

Sappho by Auguste Rodin

Sappho by Auguste Rodin

En Canot by Jean Metzinger
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Not all the artworks seized were admired by the Nazis. In fact, art that was deemed 'degenerate' by the Third Reich was looted and either destroyed or sold on. This included many modern works of art such as Jean Metzinger's En Canot.
En Canot by Jean Metzinger

The hugely influential Cubist painting, which caused a sensation when it was exhibited in Paris in 1913, was eventually acquired by Berlin's National Gallery. The Nazis confiscated the painting in 1936 and it featured in Hitler's Degenerate Art Exhibition in Munich. Since then, En Canot has been missing, likely destroyed.
Portrait of Trude Steiner by Gustav Klimt

Unlike the paintings and sculptures of many of his contemporaries, Gustav Klimt's artwork was never labelled 'degenerate' by the Nazi authorities. Still, a number of the Austrian symbolist's canvases were seized by the Third Reich, including the Portrait of Trude Steiner, which was painted in 1900.
Portrait of Trude Steiner by Gustav Klimt

Head of a Faun by Michelangelo

A seminal piece by the great Renaissance artist Michelangelo, the Head of a Faun was the Old Master's first known marble sculpture, and the artwork that won him the patronage of the powerful Florentine leader Lorenzo de' Medici.
Head of a Faun by Michelangelo

Portrait of a Young Man by Raphael

This 1513/14 artwork by the quintessential painter of the High Renaissance is regarded as the most important painting missing since World War II. Raphael's Portrait of a Young Man was stolen from the aristocratic Czartoryski family in Kraków, Poland in 1939.
Portrait of a Young Man by Raphael

The Amber Room

The Amber Room

The curators of the palace had tried to hide the room by covering it in wallpaper but to no avail, and the masterpiece was taken by the Nazis to Königsberg Castle in Kaliningrad, which was then part of Prussia. The priceless room is thought to have been destroyed along with the castle in 1945, while some experts believe it was saved and may be stashed away somewhere in Poland. Three German treasure hunters claimed in 2017 that they had found it hidden in a cave in eastern Germany. More recently, divers are to search the wreck of a German ship, the Karlsruhe, sunk off the coast of Poland in 1945, after "non-military crates" were spotted among the wreckage.
Now read about the treasures the Nazis stole that were sensationally recovered
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