BERLIN —
The mysterious discovery of 1,400 artworks apparently collected by a German
dealer under the Nazis continued to ripple disturbingly through
Germany and the art world on Sunday, prompting reports of a deal with Hitler’s
propaganda chief and calls for Germans to do more to return lost works to
Jewish heirs.
The Bild
newspaper reported on Sunday that the dealer — an art connoisseur named
Hildebrand Gurlitt who supported artists banned by the Nazis but also dealt in
stolen art with Hitler’s propaganda chief, Joseph Goebbels — arranged with
Goebbels in 1940 to pay 4,000 Swiss francs for 200 pieces of “degenerate art,”
the Nazi term to describe many modernist European works.
In
southwestern Germany, meanwhile, the police said they had recovered 22
“valuable” artworks after a call from someone who gave an address just outside
Stuttgart to go there and retrieve them.
Deidre
Berger, head of the American Jewish Committee in Germany, called on the German
government to move decisively to clear up ownership questions surrounding the
art.
“It is a
disgrace that laws are still in existence that justify injustice,” Ms. Berger
said in a statement, referring to Nazi-era laws that leave the ownership status
of some confiscated art unclear. She also noted the poignancy of having the art
come to light as Jews gathered in Berlin this weekend to commemorate the 75th
anniversary of Kristallnacht, the beginning of Hitler’s murderous persecution
of the Jews.
Paris
Match published what it said was a photograph of Hildebrand Gurlitt’s son,
Cornelius, who reportedly kept the 1,400 works stashed for decades in a Munich
apartment belonging to his family. A neighbor of Mr. Gurlitt’s in Salzburg,
Austria, confirmed that the picture was that of the elderly man.
Der
Spiegel magazine also reported receiving a typewritten and signed letter last
week from Cornelius Gurlitt that listed the return address as the same
apartment where the art was found. In the letter, the writer praised “your
spiritually rich and nobly minded” magazine, but asked that the Gurlitt family
name no longer be mentioned in it.
The large
trove of art was discovered by authorities in February 2012, but became public
knowledge only in recent days, stunning the art world and setting off a
scramble to establish ownership. Authorities have publicly identified just a
handful of the works.
In its
report on the Gurlitt-Goebbels contract, Bild included a list of the 200 works
that were to change hands, including ones by, among others, Picasso, Chagall
and Gauguin.
After
World War II, Hildebrand Gurlitt reported that most of his collection and all
of his inventory had been destroyed in the 1945 bombing of Dresden. Twenty to
25 works listed as belonging to him were included in an exhibition that toured
the United States in the mid-1950s. He died in a traffic accident in 1956.
The
police in the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg said on Sunday that they
had received a call from a resident of Kornwestheim, about six miles north of
Stuttgart, which sent officers to a house there on Saturday, where they
recovered 22 artworks.
The
police did not identify the caller, but Bild named the man as Nikolaus Frässle,
the brother-in-law of Cornelius Gurlitt. The police said that the caller had
said that news reports led him to fear for the safety of the works. The police
took the works “to a safe place,” the statement said. Bild said Mr. Frässle was
married to Cornelius Gurlitt’s sister, identified in official archives as
Nicoline Benita Renate Gurlitt, who was born in Hamburg in 1935, three years
after Cornelius. Bild said she had died but provided no further details.
The
contract with Goebbels listed Hildebrand Gurlitt as living in Hamburg at the
time. At some point during World War II, the family moved to or near Dresden,
and fled farther south to Bavaria as the war was ending.
The elder
Gurlitt was interrogated by the Allies, and his collection — listed as a few
hundred works — was kept until 1950, when it was returned to him. The origins
of those pieces — and of the far larger cache found in the Munich apartment of
Cornelius Gurlitt — is unclear. German authorities have said that research is
needed before they can publish a list, but museums and the heirs of collectors
who were stripped of their works by the Nazis have urged swift action to return
artworks to their rightful owners.
The
Sunday edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper, meanwhile, reported
that a painting by Max Liebermann, one of the few of the 1,400 works to be
publicly identified, was listed in Germany’s official databank for art seized
by the Nazis. The piece, depicting two men riding horses on a beach, is sought
by the descendants of David Friedmann, who had been a sugar refiner in Breslau,
a former German city now known as Wroclaw in Poland.
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