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Judaica

NAZI ART LOOTINGS: THE SECRET REPORT

Cet article se compose de 4 pages.
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The report also pinned down several noble Italian families for having sold many treasures to the Nazis, notably Prince Tommaso Corsini who gave away in 1941 his Memling portrait of a man holding a letter, now exhibited in the Uffizi Museum in Florence. He sold this painting to Hitler's envoy Prince Philip Von Hessen for some 7 million Italian liras. Such dealing was quite exemplary of the close collaboration between Italian and Nazi nobles.

The U.S report also targeted many art experts, historians and museum curators. Among the names listed were those of Jozef Becker, head of the Library of Prussia, who often came to Paris to acquire books stolen from Jewish-owned collections, Ludwig Curtius, head of the German Archaeological Institute in Rome, who acted as advisor to Prince Von Hessen, Doktor Dagobert Frey, head of the Art History Institute of Breslau (Wroclaw), who took part in the looting of the Krakow Museum, Siegfried Fuchs, an archaeologist who plundered many treasures in Czechoslovakia and Fritz Dworschak, curator for the Coins dept of the Kunsthistorisches Museum of Vienna, who visited many capitals to gather valuable coins for Hitler's museum in Linz.

Among other partners of the Nazis were Doktor Eduard Ploetzsch, an expert on Dutch paintings who advised Marshall Goering for his acquisitions and was involved in the looting of the Manheimer and Mendelssohn collections in the Netherlands as well as Hans Posse, head of the National gallery of Dresden, who managed the Linz Museum project and Hermann Voss, a well-known expert, discoverer of Georges de la Tour in the 1920's and successor of Posse after his death, who took part in the looting of the Schloss and Manheimer collections.

In Italy, art historian Roberto Longhi acted as advisor to Eugenio Ventura, a Florence collaborationist dealer who was involved in transactions with Marshall Goering and the ERR.

PLUNDERING IN THE NETHERLANDS

Most surprising was the ambiguous role of Max Friedlander, a great expert for Northern Primitive paintings, who had sought refuge in the Netherlands in 1939 because of his Jewish background.

Friedlander was later detained in the Nazi camp of Mathausen and freed by the Nazis in exchange for his help to track down art treasures for them. In order to save his life he accepted this ambiguous and rather shameful offer whereas many Jews were condemned to be exterminated.

Marshall Goering was much active in Holland, where he installed his agents in order to lay his hands on Dutch and Flemish paintings and Friedlander helped Kajetan Mühlmann, the Nazi representative there, in supervising the looting of art collections in this counrty. As a reward, Friedlander, who also headed a group of renegade Jewish experts placed under Nazi protection , was made an “Aryan of honour” thus escaping from certain death. The report indicated that after invading the Netherlands the Nazis soon coveted Jewish-owned collections, notably those which included paintings from the Northern Schools.

Gauleiter Seyss-Inquart rapidly ordered the setting up of a purchasing committee for the Linz Museum which was headed by Austrian SS officer Kajetan Mühlmann.

It was Mühlmann who did not hesitate to call upon Dutch and Foreign Jewish experts to work under his protection.

Max Friedlander was the central figure of this group which included other Jewish experts such as Victor Modrczenski, Myrtel Frank and Vitale Bloch.

Bloch was in constant touch with Erhard Goepel who was himself working closely with art historian Hans Posse and Herman Voss to supply the Linz Museum with stolen works.

Jewish communities in the Netherlands faced massive arrests in 1941 and their belongings were seized to the benefit of the Nazis and collaborationists, the report stated.

It indicated that several art galleries and businesses were sold at low prices to Dutch collaborationists such as Josef Kalb who took over the Stodel Company specialising in old decorative arts.

The report also referred to Alois Miedl, a Bavarian businessman and a personal friend of Marshall Goering who made frequent trips to the Netherlands to bring back to Berlin part of the collection of Frans Koenig, a German banker who had sought refuge in Amsterdam before the war. Miedl also took possession of the gallery of Jacques Goudstikker who had died accidentally while fleeing to the U.S in 1940. In addition, Miedl reportedly stole 22 paintings which he deposited in a Spanish bank in 1944.

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