A "small number" of further works was found at Gurlitt's apartment by officials securing his estate, the task force said in a statement. It declined to elaborate on the number.
The works include one picture but are largely sculptures, the task force said. One appears to be by Degas and another, a marble sculpture, could be Rodin's work, it added.
The pieces were never seized by German prosecutors, the task force said. It declined to comment on why.
Gurlitt and his collection were thrust into the public spotlight in November when authorities disclosed that they had seized 1,280 works by artists including Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Marc Chagall from his apartment more than a year earlier.
They had discovered the works while investigating Gurlitt for suspected import tax evasion. He inherited the collection from his father Hildebrand, an art dealer who traded in works confiscated by the Nazis.
Shortly before he died, Gurlitt reached a deal with the German government under which hundreds of works he owned would be checked for possible Nazi-era pasts while staying in government hands. Authorities say that deal is binding on any heirs.
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