A decade-long dispute over a portrait of Max Liebermann’s wife, painted by the German Impressionist and confiscated by the Nazis from her home in Berlin in 1943, has been settled with a financial payment to the artist’s heirs, two great-granddaughters. In a joint statement with the heirs, the Georg Schäfer Foundation, which came to own the 1930 portrait and two other works from Liebermann’s collection, said an anonymous private donor had agreed to pay an undisclosed amount to the heirs in compensation for the three works. The foundation agreed that the provenance of the works will be clearly displayed in the Georg Schäfer Museum in Schweinfurt in northern Bavaria, which houses the foundation’s collection.

Among other claimants seeking restitution from the foundation are the heirs of Therese Clara Kirstein. The heirs say that a drawing by Adolph Menzel and a Liebermann study, once owned by Kirstein, were sold under duress shortly before her death or, more likely, confiscated and sold shortly after, The New York Times reported.