Imagine having a friend who is an art aficionado come over to admire an heirloom left by distant relatives, a previously unknown Utrillo. The provenance may be a bit sketchy but that can happen, and maybe it’s a forgery but if it is, it’s a good one and practically a steal and it’s beautiful and goes with everything in the room. Only, the friend sees it and goes into shock and some horror because the painting, an original, has been missing for 82 years, thought to be destroyed by the Nazis after they swiped it from a family they sent to Dachau. The true heirs—as yet unknown—will no doubt want the painting back.
What can be worse than that? Possibly, it is being the curator of the 4,000 works of art in the collection of the Bundestag (the German parliament) and being told by art historians that two of the paintings on exhibition— “Chancellor Buelow Speaking in the Reichstag,” by Georg Waltenberger and a chalk lithography entitled “Street in Koenigsberg” by Lovis Corinth—had once belonged to Hildebrand Gurlitt. Gurlitt who was killed in a car accident in 1954, was tasked by Goebbels’ and Hitler’s to sell “degenerate art” (created by Jews and communists, abstract pioneers and Expressionists) to non-Aryans, to fund the Third Reich war effort.
That such a find was made is not surprising since at least 108 pieces in the Gurlitt collection have unknown provenance. The search for the true owners gets only more complicated because German government tax agents found 1,406 objects of art in his son’s apartment (his son is Cornelius) when they investigated him for tax fraud. The collection was valued at more than $1.38 billion and included works by Marc Chagall, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso. Another 238 pieces of art were found in March at Cornelius Gurlitt’s other apartment in Saltzburg. Of all of these pieces, 590 pieces are currently being examined to determine whether they were taken from Jewish owners. The New York Times reported last month that they also found small sculptures by Auguste Rodin and Edgar Degas. Though Gurlitt, who died last May, left the art to the Bern Art Museum, its directors stated in May that the museum would return all the Nazi-looted works.
But the ultimate mortification may fall on the head of the director of the Israel Museum, who discovered that there is Nazi-stolen art upon its walls, and the heirs of the original owners want it back.
In an interview with JLBC, Wesley Fisher, Director of Research for Claims at the Conference for Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (aka the Claims Conference or CC) said that this past June there was a major meeting concerning looted art found in the collection of Israeli museums. Asked why it has taken so long to check the provenances and return the art when heirs can be found, Fisher said that “Israel, as the homeland of the Jewish people historically has seen itself as essentially the place where cultural items, certainly heirless cultural items of the Jewish people, were to be saved.”
A lot of the lost artwork, about 400 pieces, was brought to Israel directly after World War II, but most was recovered by the Allies and was subject to the distribution policies of the Western Allies, “In particular the United States government and the United States military.”
That policy was to return the objects of art to the governments from which they came with the thought that those governments would handle the distribution to the original owners or heirs. However, said Fisher, Jews from around the world disagreed with this plan—they didn’t want the very governments that looted the works of art to have control of them instead of having them returned to the Jewish people.
Because of this, the Jewish Restitution Successor Organization was formed, known as the JRSO. It received the items and handled their distribution to Jewish communities and individuals. Heirless property was given over to Jewish Cultural Reconstruction (JCR). In many cases, the owners and heirs were dead, the communities they lived in no longer existed, or the countries were annexed by the Soviet Union and as such, were not recognized as valid by the United States.
At the same time, Mordecai Marcus was making trips to Europe on behalf of the Israel Museum and the Hebrew University Library, now the National Library of Israel. His mission was to bring back other art and historical material, books, manuscripts, ritual items, archives and the like. Since the items were considered to be heirless, it was considered a legitimate endeavor, said Fisher.
It was the policy of the JCR to keep 40 percent of the items in Israel, send 40 percent of the items to the United States and distribute the remainder to Jewish communities in the United Kingdom, South America and other places. Some of these collections of materials made it back to museums in the United States and more went to museums in Israel. Most or the “best” items went to the Israel Museum and the Hebrew University Library. The rest goes to the other museums in Israel and to religious communities.
Fisher said the items’ destinations were determined by the Ministry of Culture, the Israel Museum and the Hebrew University Library. “There is a certain amount written about the subject but it is not history that has been well researched.” He said what has been done was for the books but not for the artwork or the ritual items.
“What you’re asking is part of the problem,” he said “It’s not clear what is where in Israel because with the exception of the Israel Museum many institutions in Israel haven’t done any provenance research.” It would seem unusual that any museum receiving artwork would check the provenance but Fisher said it is only unusual since 1998 when the Washington Conference of Holocaust-Era Assets was held.
A series of principles on what should be done concerning the “assets” was agreed to by 44 countries—including Israel—which called for institutions to do research on their collections. Despite that, said Fischer, most countries have not done much except for the United States National Gallery of Art in Washington which identified more than 400 European painting with gaps in their provenance. However New York City’s Museum of Modern Art told Congress that they were “not aware of a single Nazi-tainted work of art in our collection of more than 100,000 pieces.” Austria, France, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom have done some work.
“It is unusual but it is understandable that Israel did not see itself as similar to Austria, Germany or for that matter France, Russia and so on. It saw itself as the homeland of these items.”
Fisher said many people in Israel still think this way. “One of the reasons for the forum held at the end of June on Holocaust Era Cultural Assets in Israel was precisely to try to overcome that.”
While some of the holders of looted art had not looked past their collections, the Knesset had passed a law several years ago which made all items which belonged to people murdered between 1935 and 1945 in the Shoah the property of Hashava (The Company for Location and Restitution of Holocaust Victims’ Assets in Israel.) He said that company has been mostly responsible for disposing of the items.
Fisher said they’ve mostly been involved in real estate and bank accounts but recently have started to be interested in finding owners of cultural property. Fisher said some of the paintings in the museums have been restituted.
In answer to the first question asked, finding a lost object of art in the possession of someone who does not know what they own, what happens? Fisher said it depends on the country of the owner of the private collection. In Israel it would be a voluntary act on the part of the possessor to take it to Hashava to attempt to locate the original owner. In the United States, it still would be voluntary but can be taken to the Holocaust Claims Processing Office of the New York State Department of Finance.
It is estimated that about 100,000 artworks stolen by the Nazis are still missing. However databases have been constructed in several countries, especially in Germany which established the Lost Art Database to serve as a central office for the documentation of lost cultural property relocated, moved or seized by the Nazis, especially from Jewish owners.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which deals with stolen artworks, would not answer any questions as to investigations concerning the location of or ownership of lost art of the Nazi era.
By Anne Phyllis Pinzow