Tuesday, March 3, 2026

The struggle to recover artwork looted by the Nazi's

California family’s 80-year fight to recover $100M in Nazi-looted art from Hungary


As soon as the Second World War ended in Europe in 1945, David de Csepel’s family began another battle — to return their storied art collection which was looted by the Nazis.

The family has mounted dozens of legal challenges over the last 80 years, in courts around the world for the return of their paintings, tapestries and Renaissance furniture that made up the collection of De Csepel’s great-grandfather, Baron Mór Lipót Herzog.

In recent years they have focused their efforts on the return of 28 paintings, including three El Grecos, which they value at $100 million. They are housed in public institutions in Hungary — three museums and a university in Budapest.

David De Csepel’s family has been fighting for the return of their family’s art collection, which was looted after the Nazis marched into Hungary in 1944, rounding up most of the country’s Jews. Barbara Davidson for NY Post

The family has been suing Hungary in US courts for more than 15 years, and are now hoping tough new provisions of landmark legislation before Congress could finally help them and other American victims of Nazi looting reclaim their family legacies.

Legal experts say amendments to the 2016 Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery (HEAR) Act could clear the way for foreign expropriation cases to be heard by US courts.



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