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Judaica

NAZI ART LOOTINGS: THE SECRET REPORT

Cet article se compose de 4 pages.
1 2 3 4
The report also exposed two important Paris dealers Brimo de Laroussilhe, a specialist in the domain of medieval and Renaissance art, and Louis Carré, whose galleries are still active today, regarding their dealings with Marshall Goering.

It reported the activities of the Jansen gallery which sold old furniture to the Germans and participated in the new decoration of the Reichbank in Berlin as well as the Renou et Colle gallery which sold paintings stolen from Paul Rosenberg and was in close contact with Swiss publisher Albert Skira whose involvement in the Nazi looting remained unclear.

The report also unveiled the dirty role of Miss Lucie Botton, an employee of the Seligmann brothers before the war, who led the Germans to the caches of several Jewish-owned collections.

Meanwhile, the heirs of Alphonse Kann recently discovered that a major painting by Georges Braque, “The Guitar Player”, stolen from his collection during the war, was now in the possession of the Georges Pompidou Modern art museum which has so far refused to surrender it.

THE SWISS IMPLICATION

The report stressed that Switzerland, with regard to the importance of the looting of art works during the war, held third place for illegal dealings after Germany and France.

The U.S unit could not investigate much in this neutral country but collected enough information to determine the implication of many Swiss citizens in the trafficking of stolen works of art.

Many Swiss collectors bought works without asking too many questions about their provenance while Theodor Fischer, a Lucerne dealer, appeared to have been much involved in dealings with the Germans. He was notably in close touch with Haberstock in Berlin and with Hofer, Marshall Goering's representative.

When the war ended Fischer handed back to Swiss authorities over 30 stolen paintings in view of their restitution to their legitimate owners but on the other side, it was established that had sent stolen pieces to Brazil and had offered, in vain, a stolen painting by Seurat to the Basel Museum of Fine Arts.

Hans Wendland, a German dealer living in Switzerland, was in contact with Fischer and the Nazis and worked closely with the ERR, Petrides or Rochlitz. He was arrested by the Americans in Rome in 1946.

Hungarian Count Alexander Von Frey, another art trafficker, was exposed regarding his dealings with the Nazis via a diplomatic channel from Bucharest.

Emil Bürhle, an industrialist, owner of the Oerlikon firm, also worked with the Germans in many fields. He notably supplied the Wehrmacht with ammunitions and bought quantities of stolen works of art. He was in touch with Dequoy in Paris from whom he obtained a Van Gogh painting stolen from Myriam de Rothschild, a work by Degas stolen from Alphonse Kann and several paintings pillaged from the Lévy de Benzion family and from Paul Rosenberg.

Many paintings, by Matisse or Renoir, stolen from Rosenberg found their way to Switzerland while a Zurich citizen named André Martin took possession of other valuable works from his collection, including a Matisse and a Courbet.

Paul Rosenberg painstakingly went on to track down all the works stolen from his collection after the war and recovered many of these in Switzerland.

Meanwhile, against four paintings by Cranach which he gave to Marshall Goering , Fischer got hold in 1941 in Berlin of 25 Impressionist paintings stolen from the Lévy de Benzion collection.

Two Corot works from the Bernheim-Jeune gallery were reportedly found in Zurich after the war but many other paintings looted from Jewish-owned collections which never surfaced back remained probably hidden in some Swiss banks safes.

The report stated that the case of Geneva publisher Albert Skira remained “unsolved”. Skira allegedly bought several pieces stolen in France from Fabiani, Carré, Renou et Colle but the U.S Investigation Unit, despite some serious suspicions, could not prove such fact.

It is highly probable that many of the art works stolen by the Nazis and which were not recovered after the war are still kept secretly in Switzerland.

The report also listed other countries which took part in the trafficking of works of art seized by the Nazis, notably Spain, Portugal or Sweden. Elsewhere in Europe, several illegal dealings took place in Hungary or Romania but on a much smaller level.

Strangely enough, the world had to wait during over 50 years before the report was finally made public though several well-documented books on the subject of Nazi looting, “The pillaging of Europe” and the “ The Lost Museum”, respectively by U.S writers Lynn Nicholas and Hector Feliciano were published in 1995.

Adrian Darmon

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