INVENTORY OF THE G. CRAMER OUDE KUNST GALLERY RECORDS, 1901-1998, bulk 1938-1998
Finding aid prepared by Isabella Zuralski
Descriptive Summary
Title: G. Cramer Oude Kunst gallery records
Date (inclusive): 1901-1998, bulk 1938-1998
Number: 2001.M.5
Creator/Collector:
G. Cramer Oude Kunst
Physical Description:
387.81 linear feet
(930 boxes)
Repository:
The Getty Research Institute
Special Collections
1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 1100
Los Angeles, California, 90049-1688
(310) 440-7390
Abstract: The records of G. Cramer Oude Kunst in The Hague in the Netherlands document the gallery's business since the early 1920s
until the late 1990s, with the bulk of the collection dating from 1938 to 1998. Of particular research value are Gustav Cramer's
WWII correspondence and sales receipts regarding his dealings with Nazi agents for Adolf Hitler's museum in Linz. The archive
may be the only uncensored dealer archive documenting the international art market in Nazi-occupied Europe. It comprises sixty
years of the gallery's correspondence and financial records. Also present is a portion of the photographic archive, including
circa 500 glass plate negatives, and sales catalogs. At this time, only the correspondence from 1936 through 1967 is processed
and available for access. The remainder of the collection is still in process and will be made available for research upon
completion.
Language: Collection material is predominantly in
Dutch; Flemish, with some material in
English,
French, or
German.
Biographical / Historical Note
The gallery of the art dealers Gustav Cramer (1881-1961) and his son Hans Max Cramer (b. 1920) was one of the most renowned
and influential galleries dealing in old master paintings during the 20th century in Europe. The gallery was founded in Kassel
in the late 19th century by Gustav Cramer's grandfather, Max Cramer. In 1914 Gustav Cramer inherited the gallery. After World
War I Gustav Cramer moved to Berlin where for many years he worked at the renowned Van Diemen gallery, in charge of the old
masters section, or Alte Kunst. In 1933 he opened his own gallery in the Lennéstrasse in Berlin. In 1936, he was expelled
from the official artists' organization Reichskammer der Bildenden Künste (Reich Chamber of Visual Art). In 1938, in order
to escape the Nazi regime, the family moved to the Netherlands and opened the G. Cramer Oude Kunst gallery in Javastraat 38
in The Hague. Under the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands Gustav Cramer's son Hans Max Cramer became the official owner of
the gallery. While the son officially represented the gallery, the father continued to be in charge of business. After Gustav
Cramer's death in 1961, Hans Max Cramer continued his father's business.
During World War II Gustav Cramer dealt on consignment in fine and decorative arts, mainly with German dealers in Berlin.
He also engaged as an intermediary in transactions between Nazi agents collecting for Adolf Hitler's museum in Linz and Dutch
collectors and dealers who wanted their transactions with the Nazis to remain anonymous. After the war he continued to sell
decorative arts and old master paintings to a primarily Dutch and German clientele.
Between 1954 and 1959, the gallery eliminated decorative arts from its stock in order to focus on old master paintings. Records
from this period indicate that the firm also began to engage in business more regularly with numerous museums and private
collectors in the United States. In 1960 Hans Max Cramer changed the business strategy again and began selling paintings almost
exclusively on consignment, a concept for which he was criticized during the early 1960s. This approach turned out to be successful
at a time when many private collections were being sold and dispersed. Cramer was able to make substantial business deals
by representing some of the most important private collections in the Netherlands, including H.E. ten Cate, the Becker collection,
the C.J.K. van Aalst collection, the Sidney van den Bergh collection, and numerous others. The pool of clientele expanded
to include the world's most significant old master collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty
Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Gallery, London, the National Gallery, Washington, the Minneapolis
Institute of Arts, the Toledo Art Museum, and the collections of L.H. Gilbert, Armand Hammer, Norton Simon, Baron Thyssen-Bornemisza,
and many others.
Hans Max Cramer studied at the prestigious Dutch school for art history, the Rijksinstituut voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie
in The Hague. He was head of the study-room for Dutch and Flemish old masters, and wrote a great number of articles for the
Dutch encyclopaedia Winkler Prins. During the 1980s he curated the exhibition
Dutch Painting of the Golden Age from the Royal Picture Gallery, Mauritshuis and the Galleries of Hans M. Cramer and John
Hoogsteder
, held in The Hague in 1986. It was the first publicly sponsored exhibition curated by dealers.
Administrative Information
Access
A portion of the collection is open for access by qualified researchers. The rest of the collection is in process and will
be made available for research as processing and cataloging of each series are completed. At this time, access is available
only to correspondence in Series I from 1936 through 1967.
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
G. Cramer Oude Kunst gallery records, 1901-1998,(bulk 1938-1998), The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no.
2001.M.5
Acquisition Information
Acquired in 2001.
Processing History
Alan Tomlinson processed the entire collection when it was acquired in 2001. In the fall of 2011 Isabella Zuralski began writing
the finding aid and additional processing. She adapted the biographical/historical note from a text by Louis Marchesano and
added information from online records of the Bundesamt für zentrale Dienste und offene Vermögensfragen and the Frick Collection.
As of July 2012 she completed Series I. Correspondence from 1936 through 1967. The remainder of the collection is still in
process and will be made available for research upon completion.
Related Archival Materials
Interview with Hans Cramer, 2004 April 1-2. Special Collections Accession no. 2004.M.26.
Scope and Content of Collection
At this time, access is available only to correspondence in Series I from 1936 through 1967. The rest of the collection is
being processed and will be made available for research in phases, as processing and cataloging of each series are completed.
The archive of the gallery G. Cramer Oude Kunst in The Hague in the Netherlands is a rich resource for the study of the international
market in old master paintings from the late 1930s through the end of the 20th century. It contains the gallery's complete
business records from 1938 to 1998. Of particular research value is the documentation of the activities under Nazi occupation
during WWII, especially correspondence and receipts regarding the gallery's dealings with Nazi agents for Adolf Hitler's museum
in Linz. It may be the only uncensored dealer archive documenting the international art market in Nazi-occupied Europe.
Series I consists of 345 boxes of correspondence with major art museums all over the world, but mainly in Europe, the United
States, and Canada, numerous art dealers, private collectors, auction houses, conservators, editors of art magazines, and
renowned art historians, and also with insurance agencies, transport firms, financial institutions, and lawyers. The letters
regard predominantly acquisition, shipment, conservation, and sale of paintings. Frequently they provide commentary on current
trends in the international art market, prices, aesthetics, and collecting. Also present are personal exchanges between various
members of the Cramer family and friends, especially extensive from the late 1930s until the late 1940s. A portion of the
correspondence in the postwar period, continuing well into the 1960s, deals with restitution issues and Nazi business dealings
for the museum in Linz.
Series II is the most extensive portion of the archive. It consists of 558 boxes housing the firm's complete financial records
dating from the 1920s until 1998. Included is one stock book from 1901. The most substantial portion is comprised of account
files and bank statements. Also present are tax records, sales reports, commission books, and insurance records.
Series III consists of 29 boxes predominantly of photographs of paintings and decorative arts, and photographs of the gallery.
Also present are photographs received from clients, and x-rays of paintings. This series comprises only a portion of the gallery's
vast photo archive, most of which was donated to the Rijksdienst voor Kunsthistorische Dokumentatie (RKD).
Series IV consists of 11 boxes with circa 500 glass plate negatives of art that passed through the gallery during the late
1950s and the 1960s.
Series V. consists of 19 boxes of miscellaneous papers documenting the firm's various professional activities, including dealings
with the Association of Art Dealers in the Netherlands, CINOA (International Confederation of Art and Antique Dealers'), the
Rotary Club, gallery sales catalogs, published catalogs of private collections, and press clippings.
Arrangement
Organized in five series:
Series I. Correspondence, 1936-1998;
Series II. Financial records, 1920-1998;
Series III. Photographs, undated;
Series IV. Glass plate negatives, undated;
Series V. Miscellaneous papers, 1940-1998.
Indexing Terms
Subjects - Names
Cramer, Gustav, 1881-1961
Cramer, Hans M.
Subjects - Corporate Bodies
G. Cramer Oude Kunst
Subjects - Topics
Art dealers--Correspondence
Art historians--Correspondence
Art treasures in war--Netherlands
Art--Private collections
National socialism and art--Netherlands
World War, 1939-1945--Art and the war
Genres and Forms of Material
Black-and-white photographs
Color photographs
Gelatin dry plate negatives
Photographs, Original
Radiographs
Contributors
Allen Memorial Art Museum
Bloch, Vitale
Blunt, Anthony, 1907-1983
Cate, H. E. ten,
Cramer, Gustav, 1881-1961
Cramer, Hans M.
Cranbrook School (Bloomfield Hills, Mich.)
Detroit Institute of Arts
Dussler, Luitpold, 1895-1976
Erasmus, Kurt, b. 1880
Friedländer, Max J., 1867-1958
Gelder, J. G. van (Jan Gerrit), 1903-1980
Getty, J. Paul (Jean Paul), 1892-1976
Gilbert, L. H.
Grigaut, Paul L.
Grote-Hasenbalg, Werner, 1888-
Göpel, Erhard
Haberstock, Karl, 1878-1956
Hackenbroch, Yvonne
Hannema, D, (Dirk), 1895-1984,
Hartlaub, Gustav Friedrich, 1884-1963
Held, Julius S , (Julius Samuel), 1905-2002
Henschel , Hildegard, 1909-
Henschel, Oscar Robert, 1899 - 1982
Julius Böhler (Firm)
Kamphuisen, P. W. , (Pieter Wilhelmus), 1897-1961
Magriel, Paul David, 1906-
Müller-Hofstede, Cornelius
Parks, Robert O.
Planiscig, Leo, 1887-1952
Pope-Hennessy, John Wyndham, Sir, 1913-1994
Posse, Hans, b. 1879
Smith College. Museum of Art.
Stechow, Wolfgang, 1896-1974
Stichting Nederlands Kunstbezit.
Thyssen-Bornemisza, Hans Heinrich, Baron
Toledo Museum of Art
Wittmann, Otto, 1911-2001
Container List
Series I.
Correspondence,
1936-1998
Physical Description:
143.86 linear feet
(345 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
At this time, only the correspondence from 1936 through 1967 is processed and available for access. The remainder of the series
is still in process and will be made available for research upon completion.
The gallery's correspondence is extensive and dates from 1936 to 1998. It traces business dealings with museums in Europe,
the United States, and Canada, art dealers, auction houses, private clients, numerous renowned art historians, art magazines,
conservators, lawyers, and shipping and financial institutions. Personal family correspondence and exchange with friends is
included most extensively with the first two subseries covering the years from 1936 to 1949, but it also continues throughout
the subsequent years.
The correspondence from the time of the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands and shortly after the war includes Gustav Cramer's
exchanges with Nazi officials and collaborators, private sellers, and institutions in charge of the postwar recovery of looted
art. The study of this portion of the archive provides insight into the complex state of the art market when firms attempted
to operate as usual in the context of the Nazi occupation, and the range of the Nazi collecting strategies. It also details
various activities of other dealers and galleries during the war years.
The postwar correspondece is a valuable resource for the study of changes taking place in the international art trade, especially
with regard to the increasing replacement of individual art dealers; who established personal relationships with knowledgeable
clients; by international auction houses dealing with collectors who viewed art principally as a monetary investment rather
than a cultural one. This change is particularly well reflected in the correspondence from the 1980s.
After the war, the gallery increasingly engaged in selling art to museums and private collectors in the United States. The
correspondence from this period details the process of dispersal of older private European collections at the time when American
collections and collectors were expanding greatly.
Occasionally present is the correspondence with municipal institutions in the Netherlands and Germany, including utilities
and the postal service.
The letters sent are carbon copies. Occasionally included are postcards, telegrams, obituaries, press clippings, photographs,
notes, and business cards.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by decade with the exception of the first subseries, which comprises the business and personal correspondence
of Gustav and his brother Hugo Cramer dating between 1936 and 1941. Each of the subsequent subseries is arranged chronologically
by year, within each year quarterly or by every two months, and within each chronological range alphabetically by name of
correspondent. At this time, only the correspondence from 1936 through 1967 is processed and available for access. The remainder
of the series is still in process and will be made available for research upon completion.
The gallery's original and often idiosyncratic filing order is preserved. Art museums, art faires, auction houses, private
collections, libraries, and other cultural institutions are filed predominantly under the name of the city in which they are
located, but occasionally also under the name of the institution or the individual corresponent. Correspondence with other
firms, such as financial institutions, shipping companies, or insurance agencies are also filed under the name of the city
or under the name of the firm. Art dealers, private collectors, and other individual correspondents are filed under their
name. Correspondence with art magazines is filed predominatly under the title of the magazine, but also under the name of
the city or the editor. Irregularities are common, such as filing the correspondence with the editors of the magazine
Speculum artis under S as well as under A. Occasionally, correspondence is filed based on the Dutch spelling of names of places, such as
filing of correspondence with museums in Copenhagen, Denmark under the letter K.
Series I.A.
Gustav and Hugo Cramer,
1936-1941
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This subseries consists of business letters received by Gustav or Hugo Cramer, including letters from clients and art dealers,
dating from 1936 and 1937; and letters and postcards sent from Hugo Cramer from New York City to Gustav Cramer and family
in the Netherlands between October 1938 and May 1941. A photograph, possibly of Hugo Cramer, with dog, is included with his
letters from January 1939. A postcard with a color illustration of the trylon and perisphere at the 1939 New York World's
Fair is included with his letters from February 1939. Occasionally included with letters from Hugo Cramer are various business
cards, telegrams, and press clippings.
Arrangement
Business letters received are arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. Letters from Hugo Cramer to Gustav Cramer
are arranged chronologically by year and month.
Box 1, Folder 1-8
Business letters received,
1936-1937
Letters from Hugo Cramer to Gustav Cramer,
October 1938-May 1941
Series I.B.
1938-1949
Physical Description:
5.42 linear feet
(13 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
Between 1938 and 1949, Gustav Cramer's most extensive and continuous correspondence is with the German art dealers Karl Haberstock,
Hans Hartig, Hans W. Lange, and Hans Rudolph, all in Berlin. Among other art dealers with whom Cramer corresponds continuously
are Arthur Abt in Amsterdam, Emil Backhaus in Hannover, Barci Frères in Paris, Curt Bloch in Enschede, Julius Böhler in Munich,
J.H. Borghouts in Amsterdam, Alfred Brack in Amsterdam, Brandl in Berlin, Joseph Fach in Frankfurt am Main, Gerstenberger
in Chemnitz, Pierre Landry in Paris, Hermann Range in Berlin, and Paul Margolis and Wildenstein & Co. in Paris. After the
war Cramer continued to correspond extensively with Abt, Backhaus, Curt and Vitale Bloch, Haberstock, Hartig, and Rudolph.
New, and often continuous, correspondence throughout the subsequent decades begins with the art dealers Alex and Richard Ball,
Edgar Ball in Brussels, H.E. Backer in London, Delomosne & Son in London, Lucien Delplace in Brussels, W.F. Henry in Utrecht,
August Laube in Zurich, the gallery Kunstsalon Abels in Cologne, and the antiquarian book dealer Heinrich Eisemann in London.
The most extensive correspondence, continuing well into the 1960s, begins with the art dealer and collector Heinz Steinmeyer.
Among art collectors, continously and often extensively, represented are Gustav Falck in Copenhagen, Ernst Proehl in Amsterdam,
Erwin Samuel Simon in Enschede, Heinz Steinmeyer in Berlin, the architect and art collector Felix Tikotin, and Carl Emil Wessel
in Hamburg. In 1948 Cramer corresponded with the art collector Dirk Hannema, who during the war years collaborated with the
German occupiers of the Netherlands, and in 1940 was instrumental in the sale to the Nazis of part of the collection of Franz
Koenigs.
During the war Cramer corresponded with several art historians, including Vitale Bloch, Kurt Erasmus, and Max J. Friedländer.
There is also a 1938 letter from Gustav Cramer to Lionello Venturi. After the war Cramer began corresponding with Anthony
Blunt at the Courtauld Institute of Art, John Pope Hennessy at the Victoria and Albert Museum, Leo Planiscig in Florence,
Jan Gerrit van Gelder in Utrecht, and Gustav Friedrich Hartlaub.
Among financial institutions and other firms Cramer's most extensive and continuous correspondence during and after the war
was with the Nederlandisch Clearinginstituut, the Accountskantoor Nassette & Klomp, the Departement van Handel, Nijverheid
en Scheepvaart Crisis Uitvoer Bureau, J. Schülein at the bank Gebrüder Teixeira de Mattos in Amsterdam, the N.V. Koninklijke
Meubeltransport-Maatschappoj De Gruijter, G. Cleve & Zonen Internationale Expediteurs in Rotterdam, the shipping firm Neumann
& Vettin, and the insurance agency De Voss & Zoon.
Extensive and continuous is the correspondence with the financial advisor Siegfried Reif in Berlin, A.H.M. Stibbe-Meijll,
wife of the Dutch banker Theodor Gerhard Henri Stibbe, and the lawyers Karl Hadding and W.M. Weitjens. Especially extensive
is the 1949 correspondence with Reif, which includes several lists of artwork Cramer received in commission from Hans Hartig
in 1938.
During and after the war Cramer corresponded with the editors of the
Burlington Magazine, and after the war with
Art News and the Art Foundation in New York, and especially extensively with
Die Weltkunst in Munich. He also began to correspond with art museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Hessisches Landesmuseum,
National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, and the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham, England.
Extensive exchange took place in 1949 and 1950 with the conservator Josef Leiss at the Landesmuseum in Kassel.
The war years correspondence frequently concerns art trade with Nazi agents. In 1943 Cramer corresponded extensively with
Erhard Göpel, the German art historian and under the Nazi regime Reichskommissar für die besetzten niederländischen Gebiete,
Referat Sonderfragen, and with Walter Andrea Hofer at Stabsamt des Reichsmarschalls Herman Göring. Göpel is often mentioned
within the correspondence with the director of the Staatliche Gemäldegalerie Dresden, Hans Posse, who from 1939, was in charge
of building Adolf Hitler's art collection in Linz, Austria, the Sonderauftrag Linz. The names of Göpel, Haberstock, and Böhler
are also mentioned within the 1943 correspondence with Johann E. Westerbeek, Directeur Trust- en Administratie Mij N.V. in
Amsterdam. The exchange with the Gesandtschaftsrat W. Wickel concerns sales of artwork to the German government and includes
a mention of the art dealer and auctioneer Hans W. Lange in Berlin. There is also an extensive exchange with Robert Schmidt
at the Staatliche Museen in Berlin, and Albert Boeckler at the Staatliche Museen Kunstbibliothek in Berlin.
In connection with the antisemitic policies of the Nazi regime, of particular interest is Gustav Cramer's 1939 exchange with
Theodore Delville in Kassel, Bruno Dlabal in Kassel, Hilde Fisher in Chile, and Paul and Ernst Glaser in Berlin, as it includes
information regarding Gustav and Hugo Cramer's involvement in helping Jews to escape Nazi Germany. There is also a 1939 exchange
with the Finanzamt Moabit in Berlin regarding Gustav Cramer's atonement payment for Jews (Judenvermögensabgabe).
Afer the war Cramer corresponded with the Dutch organization Stichting Nederlandsch Kunstbezit, which was assigned the task
of recuperating artworks looted by the Nazis from abroad, primarily from Germany.
Beginning in 1946 Cramer corresponded continuously with Hildegard Henschel. There is also an exchange with Oskar Robert Henschel
and Reinhard Henschel, the administrator of the Henschel estate, with Wilhelm Striebig, and K.O. Gernandt, the curator of
the Oskar R. Henschel collection, about looting of the Henschel collection by the Nazis and the recovery efforts after the
war.
In 1947 Cramer corresponded extensively with the lawyer C. Reinders Folmer in Amsterdam regarding Nazi looting of the Hartog
collection.
Of particular interest are letters to Gustav Cramer from the German author and publisher Bernhard Mehrens, who in 1949 writes
about the German society's reaction and coming to terms with the recent Nazi past and World War II atrocities.
Immediately after the war the most extensive correspondence is the personal exchange between Gustav Cramer and his wife Gertrud
Reisewitz Cramer with several members of the Cramer and the Reisewitz families, and with close friends in Germany, Italy,
United States, Brasil, and Chile, but predominantly with Gustav's brother Hugo Cramer in New York. In their letters, Gustav
and Hugo Cramer discuss current business dealings and trends in the art trade on both sides of the Atlantic. The personal
exchange with family and friends concerns mainly economic hardships. A few personal photographs are included. Also present
is extensive personal correspondence with Friede Burhenne and concerns Gustav Cramer's involvement in arranging immigration
visa and passage to Brasil for the German couple Frieda and Karl Burhenne. Continued, and often extensive, is personal correspondence
with Olga Wurzburger in New York, and with Hilgedard Henry, and Lotte Clos.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and within each year alphabetically by name of correspondent.
Box 3, Folder 1
Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Athenaion
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 1
Alazard, Jean,
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
American legation Den Haag
Physical Description:
1.0 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Bäcker, Hans E.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Backhaus, Emil
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 1
Basch, G. C. A.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 1
Bergh, L. van den
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 1
Bier, J. R.
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 3, Folder 1
Borenius, Tancred
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Bourlier, E. G. S.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Braunstein, Carl
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Bruijn, M. C. G.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 1
Bylandt, van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 2
Cramer, Hugo
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 2
Dimond, Dr. [Metropolitan Museum of Fine Arts]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 2
Does, C. F. van der
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 3
Edwards, Francis
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Erasmus, Kurt
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 3, Folder 3
Falkenburg & Co.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Foerster, Ch.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Frederiks, J. W.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Gelder, H. E. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Geus van den Heuvel, B.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Geuze, P. J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Giese, Delius
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Glaser, Paul
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 3
Goldschmidt, Hans
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Gonical [Donal F. Mc Gonical]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Gronau, H. D.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Groot, G. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 3
Gruyter, Jos. de
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 3
G [unidentified]
Physical Description:
1 item
Scope and Content Note
Postcard sent from Berlin. Regarding the address of Frau Perls in Paris.
Box 3, Folder 4
Haagsch Crisis Comité
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 4
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 3, Folder 4
Hannema, D. [Museum Boymans]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 5
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 75 items
Box 3, Folder 5
Heldring, E.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 5
Higgs, Jackson
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 5
Hirschmann, Dr.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 5
Hoppe, Ragnald
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 6
Italy, Ambassadeur d'
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 6
Jacob, Wilhelm
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 6
Joncheere, C. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 6
Jonge, C. H. de
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Katz, D.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Keezer, Marcel B.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 7
Kronthal, Peter Paul
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Landry, Pierre
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Lichtenberg, B.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Liebmann, A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 7
Loerincz, E. J.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 7
Luthmer, [Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Kassel]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 8
Margolis, Paul
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 3, Folder 8
Martin, W. [Mauritshuis]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 8
Mautner, Wilhelm
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 8
Mehrens, Bernhard
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 3, Folder 8
Mensing et Fils [Frederik Muller & Cie)
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 8
Messrs. van Marle, de Sille & Baan
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 8
Musterer, C.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 9
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 3, Folder 9
Pannwitz, von
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 9
Peerboom Voller Ockerse, A. A. M.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 9
Petersen, Henny & Hein
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 9
Phoenix [De Phoenix N.V. Kistenfabriek]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 9
Pick, Herbert
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 9
Polizei-Präsidium Berlin
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 10
Range, Hermann
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 3, Folder 11
Reichs-Kredit-Gesellschaft
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 12
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 3, Folder 11
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 11
Roell, D. C. [Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Scheiberg, Gustav
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Schneider [Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische en Ikonografische Documentatie]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Schuster
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Six, E. W. C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Soenning, W.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 13
Spanish Art Gallery, London
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 13
Spengler, G. W. I. von
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 13
Staring, A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 13
Steinmeyer, Heinz
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 3, Folder 14
Telz, H. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Tikotin, Felix
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Thurkow, C. Th. F.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Tozzi, Piero
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Veiligheidsdienst
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Ven, A. v. d.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Venturi, Lionello
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Verster, A. J. S.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Visser, J. M. L.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 14
Vogelsang, W.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 15
Waay, S. J. Mak van
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Weil, Justin
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 15
Weltkunst
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Wetzel, G.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 15
Wild, A. M. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 15
Wildenstein & Co.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Windschmidt, Franz
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Wolffenberg, Dr.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Württembergische Feuerversicherung AG Stuttgart
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 3, Folder 15
W [unidentified]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 3, Folder 15
Zollfahndungsstelle Berlin
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 3, Folder 15
Zuyderhoff, J. C. L.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 1
Art Exchange
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 1
Art News
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 2
Backhaus, Emil
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 2
Bacri Frères
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 2
Baltimore Museum of Art
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 2
Broekman, Jos. M.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 2
Brouwer, J. E.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 2
Bruyn, M. C. G. de
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 2
Belastingen [Inspecteur der directe belastingen]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 2
Bull, M. Tage
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 4, Folder 3
Clearinginstituut [Nederlandish Clearinginstituut]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 3
Christie Manson & Woods
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 3
Cramer family
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 3
Crisis [Haagsch Crisis Comité]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 4
Dahlberg, Julius
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 4
Dellevie, Theodor
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 4
Deutsches Konsulat, Rotterdam
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 4, Folder 4
Dlabal, Bruno
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 4
Drielsma, Hankes
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 5
Erasmus, Kurt
Physical Description:
circa 40 items
Box 4, Folder 6
Falck, Gustav
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 4, Folder 6
Finanzamt Moabit-West, Berlin
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 6
Fischer [Frau Fischer in Santiago de Chile]
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 4, Folder 6
Frank, Benno
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 4, Folder 6
Frank, Margot
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 6
Fresco [Herr Fresco]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 7
Gemeentemuseum Den Haag
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 7
Gend & Loos
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 7
Glaser, Paul
Physical Description:
14 items
Box 4, Folder 7
Grèce [Ministère de la Lègation de Grèce]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 7
Gren, Wenner
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 8
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
26 items
Box 4, Folder 9
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 70 items
Box 4, Folder 10
Henschel, Hildegard
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 10
Hirschman, O.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 10
Hyde, James H.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 11
Inspecteur der Invoerrechten en Accijnzen, Hague
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 11
Internationale Antiquiteitenhandel Amsterdam
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 11
[Italy] Legation royale d'Italy
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 11
Jacob, Wilhelm
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 11
Jordan, Henry
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 12
Knuttel, G. [Gemeente-Museum Den Haag]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 12
Koolen, D. A. P. N.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 12
Kouwenhoven
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 12
Kronthal, Paul
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 4, Folder 13
Landry, Pierre
Physical Description:
17 items
Box 4, Folder 13
Langedijk, C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 13
Lesser, Martin
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 13
Loeb, Albert
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 13
Longhi, Roberto
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 13
Louis Ferdinand von Preussen
Box 4, Folder 13
Lynden, J. C. E. von
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 14
Maatschappij voor Kunst- en Antiekveilingen, Amsterdam
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 14
Matthis [Berlin]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 14
Matthiesen Ltd.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 14
Meyer, Otto [Amoba Kunsthandel]
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 4, Folder 15
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 4, Folder 15
Neuburger, Paul
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 15
Niehaus, K.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 16
Ockerse, Peerboom Voller
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 16
Offner, Richard
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 16
Oppen & Co.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 16
Pampiere Wereld Antiquariaat
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 4, Folder 16
Postcheque en Girodienst 's-Gravenhage
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 16
Pottier, Ch.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 4, Folder 16
Preiss, Leonhard
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 17
Quidde, Adolf
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 17
Range, Fritz
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 4, Folder 17
Reichs-Kredit-Gesellschaft
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 17
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
circa 40 items
Box 4, Folder 17
Rijkvak en Kunstnijverheidsschool, Schoonhoven
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 17
Rothfels, Kurt
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 17
Roumanie [Ministre de la Légation Royale de Roumanie]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 17
Ruys & Co.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 18
Sinfina, N. V. Petr. Mij.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 18
Statens Museum for Kunst, Kopenhagen [Leo Swane]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 18
Statistiek [Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 18
Steinmeyer, Heinz
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 4, Folder 18
Sutherland, A.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 19
Tholen, M. H. G. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 4, Folder 19
Veth, Cornelis
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 19
Visser, J. M. L.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 19
Voet, W. J.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 4, Folder 19
V [unidentified]
Physical Description:
1 item
Scope and Content Note
Postcard sent from Geneva, Switzerland, in German. Signed by Dr. [?].
Box 4, Folder 19
Zádor, Stefan
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 4, Folder 19
Zatzenstein, Mr. [Matthiesen Ltd., London]
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 5, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 5, Folder 1
Basch, G. C. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 1
Belastingen [Inspectie der Directe Belastingen]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 1
Bernhard [Prins Bernhard]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 1
Bloch, Curt
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 1
Bohemen, C. B. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 1
Breuer [Redaktion Weltkunstverlag]
Box 5, Folder 2
Clearinginstituut [Nederlandsch Clearinginstituut]
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 5, Folder 2
Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 3
Erasmus, Kurt
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 5, Folder 4
Frederiks, J. W.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 4
Gend & Loos
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 4
Glaser, Ernst
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 5, Folder 5
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
circa 25 items
Box 5, Folder 6
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 45 items
Box 5, Folder 7
Henschel, Oscar
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 7
Inspecteur der invoerrechten en accijnzen te 's-Gravenhage
Box 5, Folder 7
Junk, W.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 7
Keezer & Zoon
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 7
Maris, H.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 5, Folder 7
Modrzejewski
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 5, Folder 7
Mossel, S. E.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 8
Nachtveiligheidsdienst
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 8
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
11 items
Box 5, Folder 9
Peereboom-Voller-Ockerse, A. A. M.
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 5, Folder 9
Posse, Hans
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 5, Folder 9
Protestantsch Hulp Comité voor Uitgewekenen
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 10
Radio-Omroep [Nederlandsche Radio-Omroep]
Box 5, Folder 10
Reens, J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 10
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 5, Folder 10
Reisewitz [G. Cramer-Reisewitz]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 5, Folder 10
Rozendaal, Th.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 11
Santheuvel, van d.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 11
Simon, Erwin Samuel
Physical Description:
circa 50 items
Box 5, Folder 12
Steinmeyer, Heinz
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 5, Folder 12
Stichtsche Huys [Chr. van Wassenaer]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 5, Folder 13
Tenkink, H. E.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 13
Tikotin, Felix
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 5, Folder 13
Visser, J. L. M.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 5, Folder 13
Wild, A. M. de
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 5, Folder 13
Zwanenberg, Saal van
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 6, Folder 2
Alter
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 2
Bärenreiter Verlag [Karl Vötterle]
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 6, Folder 3
Blom
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 3
Bloch, Curt
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 6, Folder 3
Bolle, H.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 3
Borghouts, J. H.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 3
Boucher, L. J. C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 3
Broeckelmann & Grund
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 6, Folder 4
Centraal Beheer
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 4
Clearinginstituut [Nederlandsch Clearinginstituut]
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 4
Crisis Uitvoer Bureau [Department van Handel, Nijverheid en Scheepvaart]
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 6, Folder 5
Deutsche Zeitung in den Niederlanden
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 5
Deventer, S. van [Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 5
Deviezeninstituut 's-Gravenhage
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 6, Folder 5
Doktoren-Administratie [De Stichting "Doktoren-Administratie"]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 5
Dommisse, P. K. D.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 6
Electrisch Bedrijf [Gemeentelijk Electrisch Bedrijf]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 6
Fach, Joseph
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 6, Folder 6
Frank, Alfred
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 6
Friedländer, Max J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 6
Goldschmidt, Helene
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 6
Gruijter & Co. [N.V. Koninklijke Meubeltransport-Maatschappij De Gruijter & Co.]
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 7
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 6, Folder 8-9
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 150 items
Box 6, Folder 10
Hollstein, F. W. H.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 10
Hoogendijk, D. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 10
Inspecteur der Invoerrechten en Accijnzen
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 10
Kaufman, Hugo
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 10
Keulen, M. van
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 10
Kinderhuis "Groot-Kijkduin"
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 10
Knauer, Gustav
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 11
Lange, Hans W.
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 6, Folder 12
Lemberger, E.
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 6, Folder 12
Luitwieler, H. G.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 13
Maris, M.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Ministerie van Economische Zaken, Accountantsdienst
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Müller, Frederik
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
13 items
Box 6, Folder 13
Neuwerk Buchhandlung, Kassel
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Nieuwkerk, M. B. B.
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 6, Folder 13
Nijkerk, B. J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Nocker, H. J. E. de
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 13
Noordhoek Hegt, W. F.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Pampiere Wereld "Soncino"
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 13
Posse, Hans [Staatliche Gemäldegalerie Dresden]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 13
Postcheque- en Girodienst [Bestuur van den Postcheque- en Girodienst]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 13
P.T.T.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 14
Quix van Wassenaer
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 6, Folder 14
Rathenau, Sophie
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 6, Folder 14
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 14
Rotterdamsche Bankvereeniging
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 15
Santen [C. R. van Santen & Zoon]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 15
Schoenlicht, A.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 6, Folder 15
Schülein, J. [Gebr. Teixeira de Mattos]
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 6, Folder 15
Seemann [Verlag E.A. Seemann]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 16
Simon, E. S.
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 6, Folder 16
Steinmeyer, Heinz
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 17
Tenkink, H. E.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 17
Textielbureau [Rijks-Textielbureau]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 17
Tikotin, Felix
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 6, Folder 17
Tokkie, M. Jr.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 18
Verificateur, Sectiechef te Oldenzaal
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Visser, J. L. M.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Vos & Zoon [De Vos & Zoon]
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Water, van de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 19
Welie, Antoon van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 19
Weissnar, [E?]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 6, Folder 19
Wickel, W.
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Wild, A. M. de
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Wolffenberg, G.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 6, Folder 19
Zeggelink, H. C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 7, Folder 1
Anders, Oskar
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 1
Arbeidsbureau [Gewestelijk Arbeidsbureau]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 7, Folder 2
Backhaus, Emil
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 7, Folder 2
Bärenreiter-Verlag [Karl Vötterle]
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 7, Folder 2
Beijer, J. L. [J. L. Beijer's Antiquariaat]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 2
Boelhouwer
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 2
Bloch, Curt
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 7, Folder 2
Bloch, Vitale
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 7, Folder 3
Böhler, Julius
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 7, Folder 3
Bom, G. Theod.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 3
Bordewijk [Expeditiebedrijf van Bordewijk]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 3
Borghouts, J. H.
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 7, Folder 3
Boucher, L. J. C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 3
Braat, G. J.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 3
Brack, Alfred
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 7, Folder 4
Centrale Dienst voor In-en Uitvoer
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 4
Delaunoy, Etienne
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 4
Flotow, von
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 4
Friedländer, Max J.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 5
Gerritzen, A. W.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 7, Folder 5
Gerson, Horst
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 5
Göpel, Erhard
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 7, Folder 5
Gruijter [De Gruijter & Co.]
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 7, Folder 6
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 7, Folder 7
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 50 items
Box 7, Folder 8
Herrie, A. M.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 8
Hoet, H. ten
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 8
Honig, L.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 8
Huffels, A. J. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 8
Inspecteur der Belastingen
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 8
Inspecteur van de Inkomsten-& Vermogensbelasting
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 8
Joodsche Raad voor Amsterdam
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 7, Folder 9
Knuttel, G.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 9
Lange, Hans W.
Physical Description:
circa 55 items
Box 7, Folder 10
Legat, K. A.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 7, Folder 10
Lemberger, E.
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Mak van Waay
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Marle [Van Marle & Bignell]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 11
Muller, Frederick
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Mossel, S. E.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Nederlandsch College voor Algemeene Studieleiding
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 11
Neumann, Werner
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Nijgh & van Ditmar
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 11
Nocker, H. J. E. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 12
Paech, W.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 12
Posse, Hans
Physical Description:
15 items
Scope and Content Note
Included are carbon copies of letters from Gustav Cramer to Erhard Göpel at Referat Sonderfragen in Hague.
Box 7, Folder 12
Peterich
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 12
Pijnacker Hordijk, G. J.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 12
Pool, J. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 12
Quix van Wassenaar, P.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 13
Rietveld, A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 13
Roest, C.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 7, Folder 13
Rozendaal, Th.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 14
Rudolph, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 45 items
Box 7, Folder 15
Sandvoss, Christian
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 7, Folder 15
Santen, C. R. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 15
Smits, J.
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 7, Folder 15
Sonnthal, Hermann
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 16
Scheltema & Holkema
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 16
Schoevers (Instituut Schoevers]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 16
Schülein, J. (Gebr. Teixeira de Mattos]
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 7, Folder 17
Steinmeyer, Heinz
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 7, Folder 17
Stibbe-Meijll, A. H. M.
Physical Description:
circa 15 items
Box 7, Folder 18
Thurkow, C. th. F.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 7, Folder 18
Tikotin, Felix
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Voss & Zoon
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Weitjens, W. M. A.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Westerhuis, J. P. T.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Wickel, W.
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Wieth, Herbert
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 7, Folder 19
Wild, A. M. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 7, Folder 19
Zentralstelle für jüdische Auswanderung, Amsterdam
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 8, Folder 1
Backhaus, Emil
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 1
Bärenreiter-Verlag [Karl Vötterle]
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 8, Folder 1
Batenburgs Meubeltransportmij
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 1
Bignell, Elsy J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 2
Böhler, Julius
Physical Description:
9 items
Box 8, Folder 2
Bom, G. Theod.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 2
Bordewijk [Expeditiebedrijf van Bordewijk]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 2
Bosch, W. ten
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 8, Folder 2
Braat, B.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 2
Brandl
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Burghard, Hans
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Cats [Papiergroothandel & Farrieken v.h. Gebr. Cats]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Croon, W.
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Derksen, P. H.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Duykeren, N. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 3
Emballage-inrichtig "Europa"
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 3
Faille, Jabob-Baart de la
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 3
Fischer-Böhler Antiquitäten
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 3
Flotow, W. & O.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 8, Folder 3
Friedländer, Max J.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 8, Folder 4
Gelder, J. J. de
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 4
Gerstenberger [Kunstausstellung Gerstenberger]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 4
Gruijter [De Gruijter & Co.]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 4
Gutmann, F. B.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 5
Göpel, Erhard
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 8, Folder 6
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
circa 35 items
Box 8, Folder 7
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 8, Folder 8
Hadding, Karl
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 8, Folder 8
Hinlópen, Jelma
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 8
Hofer, Walter Andreas [Stabsamt des Reichsmarschalls Herman Göring]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 8
Hollstein, F. W. H.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 8
Hoover [De Hoover Handelmaatschappij]
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 8, Folder 9
Lange, Hans W.
Physical Description:
circa 50 items
Box 8, Folder 10
Lemberger, Ernst
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 10
Martin [Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 10
Melcher [Bücherstube am Dom]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 10
Metzlersche [J. B. Metzlersche Verlagsbuchhandlung Stuttagart]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 10
Muller, Frederik
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 10
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 8, Folder 10
Neumann & Vettin
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 11
Peereboom Voller-Ockerse, A.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 11
Plantijn [Boekhandel Plantijn]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 11
Plümer's Commissiehandel
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 8, Folder 11
Pool, J. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 11
Proehl, Ernst
Physical Description:
14 items
Box 8, Folder 11
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 8, Folder 12
Rudolph, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 40 items
Box 8, Folder 13
Ruoff, W.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 13
Sandvoss, Chr.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 13
Seemann, E. A.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 13
Schmidt, Robert [Staatliche Museen, Schlossmuseum Berlin]
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 8, Folder 13
Schülein, J. [Gebr. Teixeira de Mattos]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 14
Steinmeyer, Klara and Heinz
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 14
Stenger, H. A. J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 14
Stibbe-Meijll, A. H. M.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 14
Storm, M. [Boekhandel Mercurius]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 14
S [?], Helen
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 15
Tjeenk, H. D.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 15
Turner [N. V. Turner]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 15
Ver [?], Harrie
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 15
Verstoep, C. C.
Physical Description:
11 items
Box 8, Folder 15
Verwiel, Jos
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 15
Vos & Zoon [De Vos & Zoon]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 8, Folder 15
Vötterle, Karl
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 15
Vrijzinnig Christelijk Lyceum
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 8, Folder 15
Weitjens, W. M. A.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 8, Folder 16
Westerbeek, J. E.
Physical Description:
12 items
Box 8, Folder 16
Wessel, Carl Emil
Physical Description:
11 items
Box 9, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 9, Folder 2
Akkerman
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 2
Bignell [van Marle en Bignell]
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 9, Folder 2
Bode van Noort
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 2
Bruin, A. de
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 2
Butôt, F. C.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Carstens, G.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Cramer family
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Cleve [G. Cleve & Zonen]
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Demmler, Theodor [Staatliche Museen Berlin]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Deventer, S. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Dony, L. M.
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Engelsman, B. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Feith de Kock, J.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Friedländer, Max J.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Gethmann, Otto
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 3
Göpel, Erhard
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 3
Grosshennig, Wilhelm [Kunstausstellung Gerstenberger]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 4
Haagen, F. W. van der
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 4
Haberstock, Karl
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 9, Folder 5
Hadding, Karl
Physical Description:
16 items
Box 9, Folder 6
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Scope and Content Note
Included is correspondence with Siegfried Reif.
Box 9, Folder 4
Hoover [N. V. De Hoover-Handelmaatschappy]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 4
Houben, C. H. M.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 4
Huishoudschool Laan van Meerdervoort
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 7
Jehee
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 7
Knuttel, G.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 7
Lange, Hans W.
Physical Description:
14 items
Box 9, Folder 8
Lemberger, Ernst
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 9, Folder 9
Maandagochtenblad
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 9
Mensing en Zoon [Frederick Muller]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 9
Menten
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 9
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
14 items
Box 9, Folder 9
Noelle, M.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Pfeiffer, C. W.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Pilmeijer, S. L.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Plümer's Commissiehandel
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Postcheque [Bestuur van den Postcheque en Girodienst]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Proehl, Ernst
Physical Description:
16 items
Box 9, Folder 10
Prik
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 11
Reif, Siegfried
Physical Description:
12 items
Scope and Content Note
Includes correspondence with Hans Hartig.
Box 9, Folder 10
Rens, F. G.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 12
Rudolph, Hans
Physical Description:
23 items
Scope and Content Note
Included is correspondence with Bode van Noort.
Box 9, Folder 13
Schmidt, Robert [Staatliche Museen Berlin, Schlossmuseum]
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 9, Folder 13
Schram, A. M.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 13
Seemann, E. A.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 14
Staatliche Museen, Kunstbibliothek [A. Boeckler]
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 9, Folder 15
Steinmeyer, Klara
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 15
Stibbe-Meijll, A. H. M.
Physical Description:
17 items
Box 9, Folder 15
Stockum, W. P. van, [Stockum & Zoon]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 15
S [unidentified]
Physical Description:
2 items
Scope and Content Note
Letter in Dutch sent from Hague to Hans Cramer.
Box 9, Folder 16
Telegraaf [
Dagblad De Telegraaf]
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 9, Folder 17
Uleba van [?]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 17
Vachbar [?], Esther
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 17
Vos [De Vos & Zoon]
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 9, Folder 17
Weitjens, W. M. A.
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 9, Folder 18
Wessel, Carl Emil
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 9, Folder 18
Westerbeek, J. E.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 9, Folder 18
Zwitschersche Wasscherij
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 1
Abt, Arthur
Physical Description:
circa 55 items
Box 10, Folder 2
Agnew & Sons
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 2
Art News
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 2
Asch van Wyck, J. M. M.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 10, Folder 3
Baartman, H.
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 10, Folder 3
Berkhout, Suus
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 4
Bloch, Curt
Physical Description:
23 items
Box 10, Folder 3
Boeken Import Bureau
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 3
Brandt, Paul
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 3
Burlington Magazine
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 10, Folder 5-6
Cramer family
Physical Description:
circa 170 items
Box 10, Folder 7
Christie, Mason & Woods
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 7
Chylick
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 7
Connoisseur
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 7
Daily Telegraph
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 8
Dam van
Physical Description:
8 items
Box 10, Folder 8
Deutsche Zeitung,
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 8
Ditmar van [Van Ditmar's Boeken-Import]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 8
Dony
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 8
Douma
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 9
Gendrexon, J. H.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 9
Haagsche Kiosk-Onderneming
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 9
Hahn, Martha
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 9
Hartig, Hans
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 10, Folder 9
Hess, Bertel
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 10, Folder 10
Jansen, G. M.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 10
Jehee
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 10
Katzenstein, Paul and Meta
Physical Description:
4 items
Box 10, Folder 10
Knuttel, G.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 10
Kramer, A. G.
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 10
Kuyper, van Dam & Smeer
Physical Description:
7 items
Box 10, Folder 11
Loewenstein, Gustav and Siegward
Physical Description:
15 items
Box 10, Folder 11
Militaire Commissaris voor 's-Gravenhage
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 9, Folder 9
Metzlersche Verlangsbuchhandlung
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 11
Morse [Albert Morse & Son Antique Works of Art]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 12
Nassette & Klomp
Physical Description:
circa 35 items
Box 10, Folder 13
Nederlandsche Bank
Physical Description:
3 items
Box 10, Folder 13
Nederlandsche Spoorwegen
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 13
Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 13
Nooy van der Kolff-Hoogendijk, R.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 13
Optimus [Aktiebolaget Optimus]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 13
Parke-Bernet Galleries
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 13
Peereboom Voller Ockerse, A. A. M.
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 10, Folder 13
Pfeiffer, C. W.
Physical Description:
10 items
Box 10, Folder 14
Reisewitz, Eberhard
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 10, Folder 15
Rinkhuyzen, I. van
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 15
Roje, Erica
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 10, Folder 15
Rotterdamsche Bankvereeniging
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 10, Folder 15
Ruoff, W.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 16
Schoevers [Instituut Schoevers]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 16
Segboer's, A. W.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 16
Sotheby & Co.
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 17
Stibbe - Meyll, A.H.M.
Physical Description:
circa 30 items
Box 10, Folder 16
Stoomvaart Mij. Nederland
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 16
Swerissen, H. Th.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 16
Suchtelen, L. van
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 18
Telegraaf [
Dagblad De Telegraaf]
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 18
Tels, H. A.
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 18
Tikotin, Felix
Physical Description:
5 items
Box 10, Folder 18
Utrecht [Ondervakgroup Detailhandel in Antiquiteiten]
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 18
Vaderland
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 18
Vakgroepen Woninginrichting
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 18
Veilinguitslagen N. Koppenaal
Physical Description:
1 item
Box 10, Folder 18
Voerman, Martha Catharina
Physical Description:
2 items
Box 10, Folder 18
Vos [De Vos & Zoon]
Physical Description:
6 items
Box 10, Folder 19
Wuerzburger, Olga
Physical Description:
circa 20 items
Box 11, Folder 16
Nassette & Klomp - Nijstad
Box 11, Folder 21
Rosenberg - Rotterdamsche Bankvereeniging
Box 12, Folder 2
Behrens -
Burlington Magazine
Box 12, Folder 9
Deutsche Zentralfinanzverwaltung - Gronau
Box 12, Folder 15
Magistrat der Stadt Berlin - Nijhoff
Box 12, Folder 17
Oesterreichische Gesandschaft - Phoenix
Box 12, Folder 19
Pope Hennessy - Rotterdamsche Bankvereeniging
Box 12, Folder 23
Stichting Nederlandsch Kunstbezit
Box 13, Folder 7
Hartig - Hollandsche Bank-Unie
Box 13, Folder 16
Zuschlag - Zwitsersche,
1946-1948
Box 14, Folder 10
Italy - Koninklijke Bibliotheek
Box 14, Folder 14
New York Times - Planiscig
Box 14, Folder 16
Rijks - Prentenkabinet-Röth
Box 15, Folder 2
Beheersinstituut -
Burlington Magazine
Series I.C.
1950-1959
Physical Description:
2.09 linear feet
(5 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
Between 1950 and 1959 Gustav and Hans Max Cramer continued to correspond with the art dealers Arthur Abt, H.E. Backer, Emil
Backhaus, Curt Bloch, Hans Hartig, Julius Böhler, Lucien Delplace, and the art dealer and collector Heinz Steinmeyer, but
their most extensive correspondence was with Karl Haberstock, Hans Rudolph, and Anne Abels in Cologne.
New correspondence begins with numerous other art dealers, but most extensively and continuously with Henri Heilbronner in
Munich, Walter Andrea Hofer in Munich, Curt Reinheldt in Berlin, Frank T. Sabin in London, and Alfred Spero in London. Among
others are P. de Boer in Amsterdam, Walter Bornheim in Munich, Margaret Drey in London, Galerie Fischer in Luzern, Norbert
Fischman in London, Irma Fotsch-Schley in Tessin, Paul Theodor Geyer in Berlin, Wilhelm Grosshennig in Düsseldorf, Galerie
Heinemann in Wiesbaden, Marcel B. Keezer in Leiden, Kinch & Christiansen in Copenhagen, Mathias Lempertz in Cologne, Etienne
Lévy in Paris, E.H. Lissner in Bad Rothenfelde, Herman Michaelsen in Hamburg, Berthold Osthoff in Bielefeld, Charlotte Otto
and Gerhard Müller in Darmstadt, W. Paech in Amsterdam, Gerd Rosen in Berlin, Hans Schäfer in Düsseldorf, Henrique Soares
in Lisbon, Edward Speelman in London, Konrad Strauss in Hamburg, Helmut Tenner in Heidelberg, Galerie Thum in St. Gallen,
and René Weiller in Paris.
Hans Max Cramer also began to correspond increasingly with the auction houses Ernst Hauswedell in Hamburg, Norbert Ketterer
at Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett, Kunsthaus Lempertz in Cologne, and with Messrs. Christie, Manson & Woods in London. He also
continues to correspond with the Dutch organization Stichting voor den Kunsthandel.
Among art collectors the most extensive and continuous correspondence is with Robert Draper in South Miami in Florida, L.H.
Gilbert in Lisbon, Helmhold Hoffmann in Munich, Paul Magriel in New York, K.R. Thomson at Thomson Company Limited in Toronto,
and H.W.J. Fockema Wurfbain in Spankeren, Netherlands. Cramer also continued to correspond with Reinhard and Hildegard Henschel,
and in 1958 he corresponded extensively with Albert Manz at Henschelsche Verwaltung in Kassel.
Other art collectors include Wim Arntz in Bilthoven in the Nethelands, Christoph and Alice Bernoulli in Basel, A. Brod in
London, Marianne Czerny in Würzburg, W. van Elden in The Hague, Arthur L. Erlanger at Erlanger Textile Corporation in New
York, Joseph de Ghellinck d'Elseghem in Brussels, Johannes Dieter Gollnow in Düsseldorf, M. Hendriksz-Brassinne in Liège,
Fritz Johansson in Sweden, A. Lürman in Bremen, O.W. von Radowitz in London, and Baron Thyssen-Bornemisza in Lugano-Castagnola
in Switzerland. Beginning in 1957 there is occasional correspondence with J. Paul Getty.
Among art history scholars are Vitale Bloch, Luitpold Dussler, Jan Gerrit van Gelder, Werner Grote-Hasenbalg, Cornelius Müller-Hofstede,
Yvonne Hackenbroch, and Julius Held. In 1959 Cramer corresponds with Erhard Göpel.
In the mid 1950s Hans Max Cramer began increasingly to correspond with numerous museums in the United States and to file the
letters not only under the name of the city, as he did mostly in the late 1940s and the early 1950s, but also under the name
of the director, curator, or conservator. The most extensive correspondence with curators and museum directors in the United
States is with Paul L. Grigaut at the Detroit Institute of Arts, Robert O. Parks at the Smith College Museum of Art in Northhampton,
Massachusetts, Ben Snyder at Cranbrook School in Bloomfield in Michigan, Wolfgang Stechow at Oberlin College, Dudley Peter
Allen Memorial Art Museum, and with Otto Wittmann at the Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, Ohio. Beginning in the second half
of the 1950s Cramer also corresponded increasingly with numerous museums in England, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Hans Max Cramer also advertises in art magazines. He corresponds extensively with the publishers of
Die Weltkunst and
Burlington Magazine, also with the Elsevier publishing house in Amsterdam, and with the publishers of
The Connoisseur in London, and several others. From 1953 on regular and extensive correspondence begins with the publishers of the
Apollo Magazine for the Arts in London. Present with the letters are several drafts of articles Hans Max Cramer was contributing under the title "Events
in Holland" about art sales, exhibitions, and other current events concerning art and art trade. The drafts include detailed
descriptions of various art works.
Among lawyers, the most extensive correspondence continues with Hendrik van Dam in Düsseldorf and Kurt Strassburger in Berlin,
as well as with Gustav Cramer's financial advisor since the late 1930s, Siegfried Reif in Berlin. New correspondence begins
with the lawyers Paul Leverkuehn in Hamburg and S.A. van Wien in Amsterdam.
During the 1950s correspondence also continues with the author Bruno Dlabal in Kassel, the Dutch insurance agencies Blom &
van der Aa and Veraska, and with the accounting firm Nassette & Klomp.
Noteworthy correspondents are the Dutch businessman and Minister for Defense for the Netherlands Sidney J. van den Bergh,
and the Dutch law scholar P.W. Kamphuisen.
Gustav and Hans Max Cramer also continue an extensive exchange with their family in the United States: Margot Cramer, curator
at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michigan, and Hans and Ada Cramer and Martha and Gaston Cramer in New York.
Postcards from Gaston Cramer sent between 1955 and 1957 are illustrated by Alfred Mainzer.
In 1957 Gustav Cramer corresponds with the Besatzungslastenamt in Berlin regarding restitution to Erich Rittelmeyer for the
loss of a painting by Leandro Bassano, which was confiscated by the British authorities.
Correspondence concering Giovanni Tagliani and his daughter Olga Köhl is filed under Einwohnermeldeamt Basel, Polizei Department
Basel, Olga Köhl, and Stadt Stuttgart.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and subsequently alphabetically by name of correspondent. In 1951 the chronological arrangement
is by every six months. From 1952 on the chronological arrangement is by every three months, and within each quarter alphabetically
by name of correspondent.
Box 16, Folder 11
Edelstam - Friedinger Pranter
Box 16, Folder 14
Habermehl - Hünerberg & Co.
Box 16, Folder 19
Nationale Trust Maatschappij - Ruzicka
Box 16, Folder 22
Stichting Nederlandsch Kunstbezit - Stichting voor den Kunsthandel
Box 16, Folder 25
Weiller & Co. - Wuerzburger
Box 17, Folder 6
Ebbinge Wubben - Gruijter & Co.
Box 17, Folder 9
Invoerrechten - Loewenstein
Box 17, Folder 12
National Gallery of Art - Paech
Box 17, Folder 19
Toledo Museum of Art - Volkenkunde
Box 17, Folder 21
Weltkunst - Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte
Box 18, Folder 13
Lebel - Lusingh Scheurleer
Box 18, Folder 15
Nassette & Klomp - Nugent and Nugent
Box 18, Folder 16
Österreichische Gesandschaft - Pope-Hennessy
Box 18, Folder 18
Public Admionistrator, County of New York
Box 18, Folder 19
Recker - Rotterdamsche Bank
Box 18, Folder 24
Tel Aviv - Twentsche Bank
Box 18, Folder 25
Vaderland - Vrij Nederland
Box 19, Folder 1
Abt - Assarsson - unidentified A
Box 19, Folder 12
Invoerrechten - Küppers & Bödiger
Box 19, Folder 13
Lucchesi - Moltke-Huitfeldt
Box 19, Folder 17
Psychosomatische Klinik - Rotterdamsche Bank
Box 19, Folder 20
Stichting voor den Kunsthandel - Stone
Box 19, Folder 21
Technische Dienst - Vries
Box 20, Folder 5
Centrale Dienst - Delplace
Box 20, Folder 14
Nassette & Klomp - Perocco
Box 20, Folder 15
Philips - Propyläen-Kunsthandlung
Box 20, Folder 17
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam - Ruzicka
Box 20, Folder 19
Staal - Stichting Oude Kunst en Antiekbeurs
Box 20, Folder 20
Stichting voor den Kunsthandel - Swart
Box 20, Folder 21
Toledo Museum of Art - Vries
Box 20, Folder 22
Weltkunst (Ariette Schippers)
September 1952-December 1952
Box 21, Folder 2
Backer -
Burlington Magazine
Box 21, Folder 11
Petschek - Propyläen-Kunsthandlung
Box 21, Folder 12
Regteren Altena - Ruzicka
Box 22, Folder 5
Deutscher Kunstverlag - Dussler
Box 22, Folder 7
Gatacre de Stuers - Graupe
Box 22, Folder 10
Inspectie der Belastingen - Lugt
Box 22, Folder 12
Nassette & Klomp - Nijhoff
Box 22, Folder 13
Oberndorff - Propyläen Kunsthandlung
Box 22, Folder 14
Raad van Arbeid - Ruys & Co.
Box 22, Folder 16
Shell Reisedienst - Stikker
Box 22, Folder 18
Verney - Vrijzinnig Protestantsche Radio Omroep
Box 23, Folder 3
Bank für Handel und Industrie - Bussy
Box 23, Folder 14
Nassette & Klomp - Pastor
Box 23, Folder 15
Petersdorff-Campen - Propyläen Kunsthandlung
Box 23, Folder 18
Sandvoss - Schenker & Co.
Box 23, Folder 20
Simoncelli - Stibbe-Mayll
Box 23, Folder 24
Waal - Wurzburger,
April 1953-June 1953
Box 24, Folder 3
Blom & Van der Aa - Bussy
Box 24, Folder 10
Internationales -
Kunstchronik
Box 24, Folder 16
Teixeirs de Mattos - Weihrauch
Box 24, Folder 17
Weltkunst - Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte
October 1953-December 1953
Box 25, Folder 7
Hoffmann - Kunsthaus Zürich
Box 25, Folder 9
Nassette & Klomp - Pootjes
Box 26, Folder 12
Kaczmarzyk -
Der Kunsthandel
Box 26, Folder 14
National Gallery - Propyläen-Kunsthandlung
Box 26, Folder 21
Wallace Collection - Zwitsersche
Box 27, Folder 3
Basch -
Burlington Magazine
Box 27, Folder 7
Ebbinge Wubben - Griebert
August 1954-December 1954
Box 28, Folder 4
Figueiredo - Hoerschelmann
Box 28, Folder 13
Wedekind & Hempel - Zeulenroader
Box 29, Folder 1
Aalderink -
Apollo Magazine
Box 29, Folder 2
Bastert -
Burlington Magazine
Box 29, Folder 14
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Vlaardingen
Box 30, Folder 1
Aalderink - Antiques Year Book
Box 30, Folder 4
Blom & Van der Aa - Bussy
Box 30, Folder 10
Hoogendijk - Lunsingh Scheurleer
Box 30, Folder 11
Marle & Bignell - Neumann & Vettin
September 1955-December 1955
Box 31, Folder 3
Brenninkmeijer -
Burlington Magazine
Box 31, Folder 11
Nassette & Klomp - Pope-Hennessy
Box 32, Folder 1
Abt -
Burlington Magazine
Box 32, Folder 2
Canadian Embassy - Cramer family
Box 32, Folder 4
Ebbinge Wubben - Fotsch-Schley
Box 32, Folder 7
Indianapolis -
Kunst und das schöne Heim
Box 32, Folder 9
Nassette & Klomp - Reichert
Box 33, Folder 1
Abt -
Burlington Magazine
Box 33, Folder 11
Nassette & Klomp - Pope-Hennessy
Box 33, Folder 13
Scandinavian Airlines - Strassburger
Box 34, Folder 3
Ebbinge Wubben - Gruijter
Box 34, Folder 5
Internationales Kunst-Adressbuch - Lord & Taylor
Box 34, Folder 8
Rijksbureau - Rittelmeyer
Box 34, Folder 10
Soares - Thyssen-Bornemisza
October 1956-December 1956
Box 35, Folder 13
Savorin Lohman - Strassburger
Box 36, Folder 8
Jansen - Lunsingh Scheurleer
Box 37, Folder 2
Bad Nauheim -
Burlington Magazine
Box 37, Folder 4
Dam - Fritz
April 1957-June 1957
Box 37, Folder 11
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Viltró
Box 38, Folder 6
Kamphuisen - Nassette & Klomp
October 1957-December 1957
Box 39, Folder 2
Blom -
Burlington Magazine
Box 39, Folder 17
Taylor - Thyssen-Bornemisza
Box 40, Folder 6
Far Away Marketers - Frederiks
Box 40, Folder 9
Internationales - Koninklijke
Box 40, Folder 14
Telefoondienst - Thyssen-Bornemisza
Box 41, Folder 5
Elden - Friedinger-Pranter
Box 41, Folder 10
Mackenzie - Müller-Hofstede
Box 41, Folder 15
Tice and Lynch - Villegas
October 1958-December 1958
Box 43, Folder 2
Bank -
Burlington Magazine
Box 43, Folder 12
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Vollaers
Box 43, Folder 13
Wangenheim - Zaaijer-Mees
Box 44, Folder 7
Regteren Altena - Swanström
Box 44, Folder 8
Vereeniging - Wurfbain,
January 1959-March 1959
Box 45, Folder 8
Nassette & Klomp - Polatschek
Box 46, Folder 12
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Vereeniging
Box 46, Folder 13
Wedekind & Hempell - Wurfbain
October 1959-December 1959
Box 47, Folder 2
Bier -
Burlington Magazine
October 1959-December 1959
Box 47, Folder 10
Judson - Kunsthistorisches
Box 47, Folder 16
Steinmeyer - Strassburger
Series I.D.
1960-1969
Physical Description:
21.68 linear feet
(52 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
[This note is incomplete and will be updated when processing of 1960s correspondence is completed].
After Gustav Cramer's death in 1961 Hans Max Cramer became the sole owner of the gallery (Gustav Cramer's obituary is filed
in box 54, folder 4). During the following years he had significantly increased his clientele by sending circular letters
to a large number of private art collectors and art dealers, both in Europe and United States. He also continued to correspond
with many of the clients and art museums with whom business relations were established during the 1950s and before. Personal
family correspondence was occasional and not extensive.
Among the numerous new art collectors are Gabriele Annan at King's College, Cambridge, England, Michel Bertecco-Schaub in
Geneva, Rudolph Böhling in Hamburg, Robert Courbier in Marseille, Stephen R. Currier in New York, B. Dale Melan in Seattle,
John Robinson Davies in Lausanne, Ernst Dittmar in Vienna, Stella and Patrick Donner in London, B. Dreesmann in London, W.J.R.
Dreesmann in the Netherlands, Vittorio Duca in Milan, Enrique Ellinger in Buenos Aires, Hugo Engleson in Lund, Arthur L. Erlanger
in New York, Max Fischbacher in Rottach am Tegernsee, August Fourcroy in Belgium, Myrtil Frank in New York, Horst Friedrich
in Leipzig, Herbert Girardet in Kettwig/Ruhr, Germany, H. de Givenchy in Paris, John Redmond Gleeson in Ottawa, Götz Grabert
in Stuttgart, Werner Gramberg in Hamburg, Carla Grassi-Bernardi in Milan, Franz Gross in Bottmingen, Switzerland, Erwin Grotrian-Steinweg
in Braunschweig, E.H. Heckett in Butler, Pennsylvania, Alfons Heilbronner in Buenos Aires, Günter Henle in Duisburg, Karl
Anton Henschel in Fribourg, Walter Hertz in Brussels, Baron von der Heydt in Ascona, Max Hilscher in Ulm, Walter Andrea Hofer
in Munich, C. Ernst Kaufmann, Heinz Kisters in Switzerland, Elisabeth H.J. Laan in Amsterdam, Léon Lambert de Rouvroit in
Belgium, Paul Kronacker in Brussels, Russell Latham in England, Horst Lehnert in Germany, Le Comte Philippe de Limburg Stirum
in Belgium, Jack Linsky in New York, J.A.H. Metzemaekers in the Netherlands, William Jacob Mohnen in Mannheim, Heinz Heinrich
Nordhoff at Volkswagenwerk in Wolfsburg, Jacob Polak in Sarasota, Florida, Vera Ponticelli in Florence, Detlef W. Priem in
Sennestadt, Germany, A.J. Rehhorst in Utrecht, Michael Reusch in Oslo, Norway, J.D. Reiss-Pigeaud, Emil Rosner in Rome, Armando
Sabatello in Rome, Baron de Schaetzen de Schaetzenhoff in Brussels, Konrad Kaiser at Sammlung Georg Schäfer in Obbach über
Schweinfurt, A. Schrafl in Zurich, Heinrich A. Schulz in Überlingen/Bodensee, Germany, C.W. Schweiger in Munich, Luigi Selva
in Turin, Norton Simon in California, Siegmund Starosta in Berlin, C.R.A. van Stolk in the Netherlands, Alfred Sutter in Mannheim,
K.R. Thomson at Thomson Newspapers Limited in Toronto, Harold Toppel in Puerto Rico, Annemarie Vangensten in the Netherlands,
P.G. Walker in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, and Stanley S. Wulc in Rydal, Pennsylvania.
The most extensive correspondence was with the Dutch art collectors W. van Aalst, H. ten Cate, B. Meijer (Meyer), and J.G.
Wurfbain, the art collector M.P. van Aalst in England, the German art collectors Paul Ziesche in Braunschweig and Charlotte
and Otto Müller in Darmstadt, the Italian art collectors Ado Giacci and Albert W. Nahum, both in Milan, the Portuguese art
collector L.H. Gilbert in Lisbon, the Spanish art collectors M. Manent in Barcelona and Don Manuel de Villegas y Urzaiz, the
Swiss art collector Agnes Farner-Hasler in Zurich, and the American art collectors Robert Draper in South Miami, Florida,
J. William Middendorf II at Middendorf, Colgate & Co. and Gerald C. Paget, both in New York. Cramer also continued to correspond
with the art collectors Helmhold Hoffmann, Oskar R. Henschel, J.H.C. Kern, Count Antoine Seilern in London, Judge Irwin Untermeyer
in New York, and occasionally with J. Paul Getty.
Especially extensive and continuous was the correspondence with the Swiss art collector Baron Hans-Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza.
It is filed under the Baron's name as well as under A.S. Berkes, curator of the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection, the lawyer
Joseph Groh, the secretary Spitzer, and the Galerie Schloss Rohoncz in Castagnola. Among the topics are x-rays of paintings
by Rembrandt. X-rays of paintings by Rembrandt are also discussed withn the correspondence between Cramer and the radiologist
Martin Meier-Siem in Hamburg.
New, continuous, and often extensive correspondence began with several art dealers and auctioneers, including G.C. Baroni
in Paris, Giuseppe Bellini in Florence (filed under Bellini or Florence), the Carlebach Gallery in New York, Helen Glatz in
London, the Galerie Wilhelm Grosshennig in Düsseldorf, Sidney H. Hahn in London, M. Knoedler & Co. in New York, Leonard F.
Koetser in London, Kornfeld & Klipstein in Bern, Elfriede Langeloh in Cologne, E.H. Lissner in Bad Rothenfelde, Germany, Edward
R. Lubin in New York, Ludwig Meyer-Domus in Munich, the Parke-Bernet Galleries in New York, Ewan Phillips in London, the Pulitzer
Gallery in London, Karl Christian Schmidt in Berlin, Hertha Schoene in Berlin, Gualtiero Schubert in Milan, Heinrich Stahl
in Mannheim, Julius H. Weitzner in London, and W. Wiluzanski at Gallery 58 in Tel-Aviv.
Among the art dealers and auctioneers with whom Cramer corresponded most extensively were A.S. Ciechanowiecki at Messrs. Mallett
at Bourbon House Limited in London (filed under London or under Mallett), Christie, Manson & Woods in London, Carl Eugen Pongs
in Düsseldorf, Curt Reinheldt in Berlin, and Ed. Trautschold at C.G. Boerner in Düsseldorf (filed under Trautschold, Boerner,
or Düsseldorf). He also continued to correspond with H.E. Backer in Rome who was the representative of Christie, Manson &
Woods, Herbert N. Bier in London, Julius Böhler in Munich, Curt Bloch, the Galerie Fischer in Lucerne, the Galerie Wolfgang
Gurlitt in Munich, Henri Heilbronner in Lucerne, the Kunsthaus Lempertz in Cologne (also filed under J. Hanstein), Curt Reinheldt
in Berlin, Frank J. and V. Philip Sabin in London, Heinz Steinmeyer in Munich, and the Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett, Roman Norbert
Ketterer in Stuttgart.
Extensive correspondence continued with curators and directors at several art museums in the United States, including James
B. Byrnes at the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, David G. Carter at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence,
Sherman E. Lee and Henry S. Francis at the Cleveland Museum of Art, Charles C.C. Cunningham at the Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut
(filed mostly under Hartford), John Coolidge at the Fogg Art Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Charles P. Parkhurts at the
Dudley Peter Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College, Ohio, Wolfgang Stechow at the Oberlin College, Robert O. Parks at
Smith College Museum of Art in Northhampton, Massachusetts and at the Hohn and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida,
Ben Snyder (Snijder) at the Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and with Otto Wittmann at the Toledo Museum of
Art in Toledo, Ohio. Also extensive is the correspondence with the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Atkins Museum of
Fine Arts in Kansas City, Missouri, the Vassar College Art Gallery (filed under Poughkeepsie), and the Virginia Museum of
Fine Arts in Richmond.
Cramer also corresponded extensively with H. Hickl-Szabo at the Royal Museum in Toronto, and with the National Gallery of
Canada in Ottawa. In Europe, the most extensive and continuous was his correspondence with the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen
in Munich, Paul Boerlin, conservator at the Kunstmuseum in Basel, C. Müller-Hofstede at the Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen
Berlin-Dahlem, Werner Schmalenbach at the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen in Düsseldorf, Bruno Bushart at the Staatsgalerie
Stuttgart, and with the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.
New correspondence began with the Kunstsammlungen der Veste Coburg in Germany, Luis A. Ferré at the Museo de Arte de Ponce
in Puerto Rico, Edgardo Grazia at the Soprintendenza ai Monumenti dell'Emilia in Bologna, Italy, Carlos van Hasselt at the
Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and with the Worcester Art Museum in Worchester, Massachusetts.
Cramer continued to correspond with the art historians Horst Gerson and Yvonne Hackenbroch. There is an occasional exchange
with Erhard Göpel. New correspondence began with Gerhard Evers, Paul Ganz, Egbert Haverkamp Begemann, Eduard Plietsch, Leo
van Puyvelde, Léo R. Schidlof, and Alfred Stange.
Occasional correspondence continued with the renowned Dutch law scholar W.P. Kamphuisen, with Erica Roje in Milan, and with
the lawyer Kurt Strassburger in Berlin. New correspondence began with the art experts Carl Müller-Ruzika in Frankfurt am Main
and Otto Schoener in Bremen, and with the German journalist living in the Netherlands, Günter C. Vieten.
Cramer continued to correspond with several art magazines, mainly
Die Weltkunst,
The Burlington Magazine (also filed undet the editor Benedict Nicolson), and
Art News; and he began to correspond with
The Studio in London. Extensive correspondence began also with the German newspaper
Das Handelsblatt (also filed under the editor F. Hufen).
Hans Max Cramer continued to correspond extensively with Gustav Cramer's financial advisor Siefried Reif in Berlin. The correspondence
with Reif from the early 1960s includes an exchange with the Entschädigungsamt Berlin. He also continued to correspond extensively
with the accounting firm Nassette & Klomp, which in 1961 changed name to Nassette & Raakman. The letters from December 1960
include the English translation of the Deed of Dissolution of the partnership firm of G. Cramer, Oude Kust, The Hague into
a limited partnership between Gustav Cramer and Hans Max Cramer, signed and stamped by a notary.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and within each year by every two months, and within each two month period alphabetically
by name of correspondent.
Box 48, Folder 2
Backer -
Burlington Magazine
Hamburg - Huth
Scope and Content Note
One color photograph is included with the correspondence with Henschel.
Box 48, Folder 10
Mariano - Nassette & Klomp
Box 48, Folder 15
Tedeschi - Thyssen Bornemisza,
Box 50, Folder 5
Detroit - D [unidentified]
Box 50, Folder 11
Internationales - Kononklijke
Box 50, Folder 13
Nassette & Raakman - Parkhurst
Box 50, Folder 17
Thyssen Bornemisza - Villegas
Box 51, Folder 6
Heijdenrijk - Internationaal
Box 51, Folder 9
Nassette & Klomp - Puyvelde
November 1960-December 1960
Box 52, Folder 1
Adda -
Burlington Magazine
Box 52, Folder 3
Eisersdorff - Expertisebureau
January 1961-February 1961
Box 53, Folder 5
Edelstam - Expertisebureau
Box 53, Folder 9
Internationales - Kroniek
Box 53, Folder 12
Nassette & Raakman - Nürnberg
Box 53, Folder 14
Radowitz - Rotterdamsche Bank
Box 54, Folder 3
Besançon -
Burlington Magazine
Box 54, Folder 9
Innemee - Kunsthistorische Kring
Box 54, Folder 11
Nassette & Raakman - Nürnberg
Box 54, Folder 13
Quarzlampen - Rijksbureau
Box 55, Folder 6
Gleim - Gurlitt,
May 1961-June 1961
Box 55, Folder 8
Kamphuisen - Kunst & Technik Verlag
Box 55, Folder 10
Nassette & Raakman - Northhampton
Box 55, Folder 12
Quarzlampen - Reiss-Pigeaud
Box 55, Folder 15
Tedeschi - Twentsche Bank
Box 56, Folder 5
Daily American - Düsseldorf
Box 56, Folder 11
Nassette & Raakman - Oeil
September 1961-October 1961
November 1961-December 1961
Joffre - München,
Scope and Content Note
One black-and-white slide is included with the correspondence with Martin Meier-Siem.
Box 58, Folder 14
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Tralbaut
January 1962-February 1962
Box 60, Folder 11
Onderdenwijngaard - Prell
Box 62, Folder 2
Bank voor Handel - Brugge
Box 62, Folder 8
Indianapolis - Kunsthandel
September 1962-October 1962
Box 63, Folder 13
Onderdenwijngaard - Pretoria
November 1962-December 1962
Box 64, Folder 2
Bellini -
Burlington Magazine
Box 64, Folder 12
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Wurfbain
Box 65, Folder 14
Thyssen-Bornemisza - Treviso
Box 66, Folder 2
Bank -
Burlington Magazine
Box 66, Folder 3
Cambridge - Frederiksborg
Box 68, Folder 8
Industriekurier - Kopenhagen
November 1963-December 1963
Box 69, Folder 2
Bank voor Handel - Burlington
Box 70, Folder 14
Reiss - Rijksgebouwendienst
Box 71, Folder 2
Bellini -
Burlington Magazine
Box 71, Folder 6
Farner - Gutmann,
April 1964-May 1964
Box 71, Folder 7
Haberstock - Hünerberg,
April 1964-May 1964
Box 71, Folder 8
Jacksonville - Kansas City,
April 1964-May 1964
Box 72, Folder 3
Blewer -
Burlington Magazine
Box 72, Folder 10
Lieberman - Müllenmeister
September 1964-October 1964
November 1964-December 1964
Box 74, Folder 2
Bernier -
Burlington Magazin
Box 75, Folder 16
San Francisco - Schreiner
Box 76, Folder 2
Bier -
Burlington Magazin
September 1965-October 1965
Box 78, Folder 10
International - Kunsthaus
November 1965-December 1965
Box 79, Folder 3
Berckel -
Burlington Magazin
Box 79, Folder 15
Onderdenwijngaard - Puyvelde
January 1966-February 1966
Box 80, Folder 2
Bachmann -
Burlington Magazine
Box 80, Folder 9
Lagerberg - Müller-Hofstede
Box 82, Folder 11
Meier-Siem - Müller-Hofstede
November 1966-December 1966
Box 84, Folder 4
Böhler -
Burlington Magazin
Box 84, Folder 10
Gabrilovitsch - Gudlaugsson
January 1967-February 1967
Series I.E.
1970-1979
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and within each year by every two months, and within each two month period alphabetically
by name of correspondent.
Series I.F.
1980-1989
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and within each year by every two months, and within each two month period alphabetically
by name of correspondent.
Series I.G.
1990-1998
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year and within each year by every two months, and within each two month period alphabetically
by name of correspondent.
Series I.E.
Miscellaneous letters and other papers,
Physical Description:
7.51 linear feet
(18 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged by year. Filed at the end are greeting cards, correspondence books, and letter books.
Series II.
Financial records,
1920-1998
Physical Description:
232.69 linear feet
(558 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged in six subseries by document type.
Series II.A.
Account files,
1933-1998
Physical Description:
170.97 linear feet
(410 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year, and within each year, chronologically by month, and within each month alphabetically by
name of the persons, organizations, or companies involved.
Series II.B.
Bank statements,
1938-1982
Physical Description:
53.38 linear feet
(128 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Where several years are covered by consecutive boxes, the statements in those boxes are arranged chronologically by year,
and then alphabetically by the name of the bank. Statements for personal accounts, when identifiable as such, are placed after
that year's statements for business accounts, in a separate sequence arranged in the same order.
Series II.C.
Taxes,
1920s-1995
Physical Description:
4.59 linear feet
(11 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year.
Series II.D.
Reports,
1942-1993
Physical Description:
1.67 linear feet
(4 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year.
Series II.E.
Commission books,
1970-1992
Physical Description:
1.25 linear feet
(3 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year.
Series II.F.
Insurance records,
1945-1988
Physical Description:
0.83 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged chronologically by year.
Series III.
Photographs,
undated
Physical Description:
12.09 linear feet
(29 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Grouped by topic.
Paintings,
undated
Physical Description:
7.09 linear feet
(17 boxes)
Bronzes, miniatures, furniture,
undated
Physical Description:
0.83 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Prints,
undated
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Photographs of the gallery,
undated
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
S. van den Berg,
undated
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Received and queries,
undated
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Color separations and x-rays,
undated
Physical Description:
1.67 linear feet
(4 boxes)
Miscellaneous photographs,
undated
Physical Description:
0.83 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Series IV.
Glass plate negatives,
undated
Physical Description:
4.59 linear feet
(11 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Arranged as received, numerically.
Series V.
Miscellaneous papers,
1940-1998
Physical Description:
7.92 linear feet
(19 boxes)
Scope and Content Note
This portion of the archive is still in process and not open for use.
Arrangement
Grouped alphabetically by topic. Filed at the end are a wall calendar and press clippings.
Association of Art Dealers in the Netherlands,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
CINOA papers,
Physical Description:
0.83 linear feet
(2 boxes)
Cramer gallery catalogs,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
IBM Magnabelt recording tapes,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Javastraat Drug Center,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Rotary Club papers,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)
Traffic Circulation Plan,
Physical Description:
0.42 linear feet
(1 box)