Hermann Frenkel (born May 21, 1850, Danzig - died May 26, 1932, Berlin) was a partner of the Jacquier and Securius Bank and after 1923 a partner of Friedrich Minoux, owner of the Wannsee Villa, later the venue of the Wannsee Conference. Frenkel was a Privy Commercial Councillor (Geheimer Kommerzienrat), and one of the founders of Universum Film AG.[1][2] Frenkel was also a noted art collector, who concentrated on German, French, and Spanish 19th-century paintings, as well as Dutch 17th-century and Venetian 18th-century works.[3] His heirs sold most of the collection in October 1932.[4] Some works were not sold, among them a still-life by Snyders, which today is in the Museum Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf, which was bought in 1938.[5]
References
edit- ^ Ingo Köhler. Die "Arisierung" der Privatbanken im Dritten Reich. CH Beck. Munich 2005 p315
- ^ Klaus Kreimeier. The Ufa story: a history of Germany's greatest film company, 1918-1945. University of California Press 1999 p29
- ^ Sven Kuhrau. Der Kunstsammler im Kaiserreich: Kunst und Repräsentation in der Berliner Privatsammlerkultur. Verlag Ludwig. Kiel 2005 p 273
- ^ Kunstsalon Paul Cassirer, Berlin [Hrsg.], Bilder und Kunstgegenstände aus dem Nachlass Geheimrat Hermann Frenkel, aus Berliner Privatsammlungen, der Faustzyklus von Lovis Corinth, Sammlung Dr. S, Berlin: Ausstellung: Montag, den 17. Oktober bis Mittwoch, den 19. Oktober 1932 ; Versteigerung: Donnerstag, den 20. Oktober 1932, [1]
- ^ "SMKP: Stiftung Museum Kunstpalast: Sammler und Förderer". www.smkp.de. Archived from the original on 2014-04-14.