Cultural Goods from Cameroon in German Museums

The Linden-Museum Stuttgart and the German Lost Art Foundation initiate a research project in five ethnographic collections.
New blog posts
You can find interesting new posts on provenance research on our blog.
Digital information event: Funding opportunities in the field of colonial contexts
The De­part­ment for Cul­tur­al Goods and Col­lec­tions from Colo­nial Con­texts invites you to a digital information event on November 6, 2025.
Explanatory Videos
We offer short videos on important questions of provenance research - to watch and download.

Historical Contexts

The German Lost Art Foundation deals with cultural property that was once looted from its owners – during the Nazi era, the colonial period or in the Soviet Occupation Zone and the GDR – as well as with items of cultural property that went missing in the course of the Second World War. The Foundation funds provenance research in order to clarify whether or not objects were seized unlawfully. Here we provide information on historical background and funding opportunities, as well as material for research purposes.
Schlosskirche Ellingen, Ellingen, April 1945
Nazi-looted Cultural Property
The National Socialist state enriched itself extensively and ruthlessly by expropriating the property of Jewish citizens in particular. Here you will find background information on Nazi art looting along with details of project funding and how to report restitutions.
Pustaha, a "Spell Book" from the island of Sumatra, which is now in the Greiz Collection of Books and Engravings.
Colonial Contexts
Not only cultural goods were looted during the colonial period but in many thousands of instances also human remains. We offer information about seizure in colonial contexts, explain funding opportunities and provide materials.
Paintings are taken out of a box while many people watch
Wartime Losses
During the Second World War and shortly afterwards, millions of items of cultural property were transferred to or from Germany. See here for more on the history of wartime losses along with the relevant materials.
Saal Schloss Rötha
Soviet Occupation Zone / GDR
In the Soviet Occupation Zone and the GDR, cultural assets were looted, seized and also sold by the state. Here we introduce research into the expropriation of cultural property between 1945 and 1990.

Project Statistics

Project statistics and a project finder provide an overview of all projects that the German Lost Art Foundation and its predecessor institution have funded in the past or are still funding. Using a map format and filters, it is possible to search for and display projects according to specific historical contexts or federal states, for example.
Thuringia Schleswig-Holstein Saxony-Anhalt Saxony Saarland Rhineland-Palatinate North Rhine-Westphalia Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Lower Saxony Hesse Hamburg Bremen Brandenburg Berlin Bavaria Baden-Württemberg All 609 Projects
Germany
609 Projects

100% of all German projects

All projects

short-term projects

long-term projects

of which Nazi-looted cultural property

short-term projects

long-term projects

Colonial contexts

short-term projects

long-term projects

Soviet Occupation Zone and GDR

short-term projects

long-term projects

of which Wartime Losses

short-term projects

long-term projects

Active Projects Completed Not yet begun
Total Number 93 494 20
Archive 1 8 0
Library 8 18 3
Institute 2 25 2
Cooperations between public and private institutions 0 2 0
Cooperations between individuals and public institutions 4 16 2
Museum 41 268 7
Privately owned institutions 1 15 0
Private person 5 12 2
University 16 51 1
Public administration 15 79 3
To the projects

Registration is required to view the final reports on Proveana.

Proveana Logo english optimized
Proveana is the German Lost Art Foundation’s database for provenance research. It is mainly dedicated to presenting the outcomes of research projects funded by the Foundation to the public at large.
Lost Art English Logotype optimized
The Lost Art Database lists cultural property that was seized from Jewish citizens between 1933 and 1945 (“Nazi-looted cultural property”). It also contains reports on cultural goods displaced as a result of the Second World War.

News & Events

Chair from Cameroon
The Linden-Museum Stuttgart and the German Lost Art Foundation initiate a research project in five ethnographic collections.
Library of German Lost Art Foundation
The German Lost Art Foundation invites you to the next event within the series "Kolloquium Provenienzforschung" on 15 September 2025.
open book with handwritten references to the owner
Voltaire’s biography of the Swedish king Charles XII is now with Lemke’s descendants in New York.

Blog Posts

Porträt eines Mannes
Valence Silayo talks about cultural belongings of the Tanzanian Chagga people in Germany.
Stamp on book page
Reflections on object autopsy in large-scale investigative corpora
Index cards
On the responsible use of discriminatory language in the age of AI

Publications

Book cover
"Provenire" series: Volume 5 – "Die venezianischen Fälle"
"The Venetian cases" provide bridges between art, history, law and ethics. They are accompanied by aspects and models of solutions, as well as a sample restitution agreement. (in German language)
Buchcover
The Periodical “Provenienz & Forschung” (2024)
This issue of the Periodical „Provenienz & Forschung" deals with the topic „1945". (in German)
Cover Working Paper 9-2025
Working Paper 9/2025
With issue 9/2025 of the Working Paper series, Jan Hüsgen presents „Missionary Societies and Religious Orders in German Colonies and Their Contribution to Ethnographic Collections“.