Nazi-Looted Jordaens Painting Returned to Rightful Owners

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De terugkeer van de Heilige Familie van de vlucht naar Egypte - Jordaens

A painting by Jacques Jordaens, The Return of the Holy Family from the Flight into Egypt, was returned to the descendants of its original owners on 5 february 2025 during a ceremony at the museum Kazerne Dossin in Mechelen.

The artwork had been stolen by Nazis in 1940 from Emmaus Castle in Walem near Mechelen, the home of resistance fighter Joseph Scheppers de Bergstein, who was imprisoned in Buchenwald.  After the war, his son reported the theft, which resulted in the painting being listed in the lootedart.belgium.be

This case marks the first successful restitution of an artwork identified through the database since it was launched by the Belgian Federal Public Service Economy in 2021.

In 2022, the panel was discovered concealed in a false ceiling in the cellar of a Dutchman living in Southern France.  He had long suspected the painting was stolen and had previously shared his concerns with his nephew.  Upon the man’s death, his sister inherited the property, including the artwork, and her son subsequently initiated the process of returning it to its rightful owners.

The FPS Economy helped identify the picture as a Jordaens and confirmed that it was listed as looted. After contacting the rightful heirs, the painting was carefully restored and returned to the Scheppers de Bergstein family nearly 80 years to the day after its theft.

The painting portrays Joseph, Mary, and Jesus returning to Israel. Two other versions of the artwork are known: one in the Berlin State Museum and the other in the Rhode Island School of Design Museum in the US.