Bust under counter of charity shop Missing Roman artwork revealed

In 2018, an American art collector, World War II. He is said to have bought a marble Roman statue that appeared to have been lost in Germany during World War II. He only paid $35 for it.

Laura Young discovered the bust that year under a table in a branch of the Texas Goodwill Store, a large chain of thrift stores that donated profits from merchandise to charities. A Sotheby’s expert has determined that it is an authentic piece of Roman art from the 1st century BC or 1st century AD.

During World War II, the artwork was housed in a museum in the German city of Aschaffenburg, where it was housed in a recreated Roman house. After an Allied bombardment that also hit the museum, the statue disappeared without a trace.

At the end of the war, Aschaffenburg was taken by the Americans. It is suspected that during this time or later during the Cold War, an American soldier took a bust to the United States.

great excitement

The statue is currently on display at the San Antonio Museum of Art. Next year it will return to its rightful owner: the German state of Bavaria.

Art collector Laura Young was thrilled after hearing the sculpture’s story. “But it was also a bittersweet dessert because I knew I couldn’t keep it or sell it. Anyway, I’m happy to be a part of his complex story. And it looked beautiful in my house for so long that it lasted a long time. †

Source: NOS

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