↑ ۳٫۰۳٫۱۳٫۲۳٫۳"Boston museum pays heirs for 18th-century figurines to settle Holocaust restitution claim" (انگلیسی جه). ۴ مه۲۰۱۷. Retrieved 13 May2025. MAY 4, 2017 11:54 AMBOSTON (JTA) — The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston has settled a Holocaust-era restitution claim with the estate of a Jewish collector that allows the museum to retain seven pieces of 18th-century German porcelain that were sold in Berlin in 1937 during Nazi-era persecution.The settlement for an undisclosed amount of money to the heirs of the estate of Emma Budge was announced Wednesday by the museum.{{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= و |date= (help)نگهداری یادکرد:زبان ناشناخته (link)
↑ ۴٫۰۴٫۱۴٫۲۴٫۳"MFA returns painting stolen from Jewish collector during WWII | WBUR News". MFA returns painting stolen from Jewish collector during WWII. ۲۷ فوریه۲۰۲۲. Retrieved 13 May2025. When Nazi forces invaded Hungary in 1944, the Jewish politician and art collector Ferenc Chorin and his family were lucky to escape with their lives. Chorin’s collection of paintings, which he left in a vault in the Hungarian Commercial Bank of Pest, was less fortunate. The entire collection disappeared from the vault in the course of the war — likely looted during the Siege of Budapest in 1945.Nearly 80 years later, Chorin’s family located one of the paintings, “View of Beverwijk,” in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. The museum announced this month that it had reached an agreement to return the painting to the family.{{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= و |date= (help)
↑ ۵٫۰۵٫۱۵٫۲۵٫۳"Holocaust historians blast MFA stance in legal dispute; Insist pressures of era led to painting's sale". ۲۸ مه۲۰۰۸. Retrieved 13 May2025. Holocaust historians are criticizing the Boston Museum of Fine Arts for its stance in an escalating legal dispute over the ownership of a valuable 1913 painting. The work, Oskar Kokoschka's "Two Nudes (Lovers)," has hung at the MFA almost continuously since 1973.The dispute began in March 2007, when attorneys for Claudia Seger-Thomschitz, an Austrian woman who says she is the rightful owner of "Two Nudes," approached the museum demanding its return. Lawyers for Seger-Thomschitz, an heir to Jewish art collector Oskar Reichel, say Reichel sold the painting under duress in Nazi-occupied 1939 Vienna.But the MFA says that Reichel sold the painting voluntarily and that it never passed through Nazi hands. After the museum conducted its own research into the painting's history, it presented its findings to Seger-Thomschitz's lawyers and requested that she drop her claim for restitution. When she refused, the museum filed suit against her in January in US District Court for the District of Massachusetts to establish legal title to the painting{{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= و |date= (help)