Johann Carl Loth

Johann Carl Loth (Baptized 8 August 1632 – 6 October 1698) was a German Baroque painter who spent most of his life in Venice.

[2] He was the son and pupil of Johann Ulrich Loth [de][1] and was possibly influenced by Giovan Battista Langetti.

[1] He attracted well-to-do artists, such as Cornelis de Bruijn and Jan van Bunnik, who made trips especially to visit his studio.

Isaac Blessing Jacob is on long-term loan to the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles, having recently been reclaimed by the Bloch family, originally from Brno, Czechoslovakia.

In 2023 a Loth painting that had been looted by the Nazis was found after a search of more than 80 years by the family of Jewish Czech industrialist Johann Bloch.

Johann Carl Loth, lithograph from the Deutsche Künstler-Gallerie by Maximilian Franck
Allegory of Victory , sanguine