Monumental Mission
Assigned to find art looted by the Nazis, Western Allied forces faced an incredible challenge
- By Robert M. Poole
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
The majestic Nefertiti, carved from limestone and painted in realistic tones, reigned at Wiesbaden until 1955, when she was returned to Berlin's Egyptian Museum. She resides there today in a place of honor, charming new generations of admirers—among them her fellow Egyptians, who maintain that she was smuggled out of their country in 1912 and ought to be returned. Although Egypt recently renewed its claim for Nefertiti, Germany has been unwilling to give her up, even temporarily, for fear that she might be damaged in transit. Besides, the Germans say, any works legally imported before 1972 can be kept under the terms of a Unesco convention. Yes, say the Egyptians, but Nefertiti was exported illegally, so the convention does not apply.
At least Nefertiti has a home. The same could not be said for the cultural treasures that finished the war as orphans, with no identifiable parentage and no place to go. Among these were hundreds of Torah scrolls and other religious objects looted from European synagogues and salvaged for a prospective Nazi museum devoted to "the Jewish question." Many of these objects, owned by individuals or communities obliterated by the Third Reich, were given their own room at Wiesbaden.
Stalking the corridors of the vast Landesmuseum at all hours, Lindsay felt an involuntary shudder each time he passed the Torah room. "It was an unnerving situation," he said. "We knew the circumstances that had brought those things in. You couldn't sleep at night."
Wiesbaden's inventory of famous paintings and sculptures was whittled down and repatriated—a process that took until 1958 to complete—but the Torahs and other religious objects remained unclaimed. It soon became clear that a new collecting point was needed for these priceless objects still being unearthed in postwar Germany.
This material was sent to the newly established Offenbach Archival Depot near Frankfurt, where more than three million printed items and important religious materials would be gathered from Wiesbaden, Munich and other collecting points. The Offenbach facility, located in a five-story factory owned by the I.G. Farben company, opened in July 1945. Several months later, when Capt. Seymour J. Pomrenze, a career Army officer and archives specialist, arrived to supervise the facility, he found the depot stacked to the ceilings with books, archival records and religious objects in disarray.
"It was the biggest mess I've ever seen," recalls Pomrenze, 91, and now living in Riverdale, New York. Libraries stolen from France—including the invaluable collections and papers of the Rothschild family—were mingled with those from Russia and Italy, family correspondence was scattered among Masonic records and Torah scrolls were strewn in heaps.
"The Nazis did a great job of preserving the things they wanted to destroy—they didn't throw anything out," says Pomrenze. In fact, he jokes, they might have won the war if they had spent less time looting and more time fighting.
He found a bewildered staff of six German workers wandering among the piles of archival material at Offenbach. "Nobody knew what to do. First we needed to get bodies in there to move this stuff," recalls Pomrenze, who boosted the staff by 167 workers in his first month. Then, leafing through the major collections, he copied all identifying bookmarks and library stamps, which pointed to a country of origin. From these he produced a thick reference guide that allowed workers to identify the collections by origin.
Pomrenze then divided the building into rooms organized by country, which cleared the way for national representatives to identify their material. The chief archivist of the Netherlands collected 329,000 items, including books stolen from the University of Amsterdam and a huge cache relating to the Order of Masons, considered anti-Nazi by the Germans. French archivists claimed 328,000 items for restitution; the Soviets went home with 232,000 items; Italy took 225,000; smaller restitutions were made to Belgium, Hungary, Poland and elsewhere.
No sooner had Pomrenze started to make a dent in the Offenbach inventory than newly discovered materials poured into the depot; the paper tide continued through 1947 and 1948. "We had things pretty well organized by then," says Pomrenze. Yet even after some two million books and other items had been dispersed, about a million objects remained. Pomrenze's successor described how it felt to comb through the unclaimed material, such as personal letters and boxes of books. "There was something sad and mournful about these volumes, as if they were whispering a tale of...hope, since obliterated," wrote Capt. Isaac Bencowitz. "I would find myself straightening out these books and arranging them in the boxes with a personal sense of tenderness, as if they had belonged to someone dear to me."
Pomrenze eventually helped to find homes for many of the orphaned materials, which went to 48 libraries in the United States and Europe and the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York City.
"As far as I am concerned," says Pomrenze, "that was the highlight of the assignments I had in the Army, where I served for a total of 34 years." Pomrenze, who retired as a colonel and chief archivist of the Army, suggests that one must not lose sight of the written word's role in the story of civilization. "Paintings are beautiful and, of course, culturally valuable, but without archives we'd have no history, no way to know exactly what happened."
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (37)
+ View All Comments
I have seen a lot of people on here inquiring about the value of J Kugler paintings. I only have one painting (it's the only painting I've ever purchased), but I am interested in buying some more. Please feel free to reach out to my via email at whatreality1@gmail.com if you are ever interested in selling. I'd appreciate it.
Posted by David on February 16,2012 | 10:48 AM
I have an oil painting by Josef Kugler measures 24 x 36. It is forest scene with a large evergreen just off center left and a stream/pond off center right. I am looking for value, age and any other info anyone may have. Thank you
Posted by Theresa Mandracchia on November 1,2011 | 10:43 AM
I inherited a Franz Wallis(Waldner) from my grandmother whose last name was Schmitz from Germany or Austria. It is a mountain scene with a cabin and a lake and is dated 1883. I have googled his name but have found a few people who own a Franz Wallis painting but really have found no history on him other than he belonged to a group of seven Austrian Painters.I would love to find any information on him and if it is valuable. I would be interested in selling it.It is 34x18 in size. If anyone knows anything about him please email me. .
Posted by michael barber on August 6,2011 | 03:19 PM
I've been trying to find out anything about an artist named Franz Wallis. Can you help. I've scoured the internet and even went to the "library" but to no avail. I would like to know more about this fantastic artist that as seemed to vanish from the artistic world.
Posted by Jerry L. Wilson on May 19,2011 | 02:06 PM
My parents have a J Kugler SEN forest scene with a stream running through it. I have always liked the painting and wondered if it has any significant value. If anyone knows more about this artist, I am interested. They bought the painting in the early to mid 1950's.
Posted by Mark Anderson on April 22,2011 | 12:51 AM
HAVE A FRANZ WALLIS PAINTING DEPICTING A SCENE WITH 2 SHEEP A LAKE AMONG THE HILLS SIGNED FRANZ WALLIS WITH LIMITED HISTORY. WHAT CAN YOU TELL ME ABOUT THIS? THANKS JAMES
Posted by JAMES MORTENSEN on April 1,2011 | 05:48 AM
A painting depicting a forest and stream signed by J Kugler SEN was given to a family member. Is anyone aware of this particular painting or similar?? We are not quite sure where to start. Please email me -- oneone1111@bell.net.
Thanks.
Posted by Tracy on January 31,2011 | 07:50 PM
Thank you for a marvelous vignette on the importance of art and the written word to the continued understanding of culture. Would that we could convince rigidly religious governments that while they may not agree with the reasons for some historic works, they need to be preserved, not bombed or desecrated.
Posted by Gillian Callen on December 15,2010 | 08:49 PM
I would like to know more about the Passover plate owned by M.Evans. Please contact me.
Posted by Richard Cole on November 17,2010 | 03:16 PM
i have a passover plate which is written in hebrew it is very old.i am looking for someone whom may be intested in buying it.
Posted by michelle evans on October 30,2010 | 01:50 PM
I have a large painting signed J Kugler Sen. Would be interested to know if his works are valuable or not.
Posted by Rossline O'Gara on September 27,2010 | 10:38 AM
Ed - I too have a seascape by Wallis. Did you gather anything. Write me at omnigon@yahoo.com
Posted by Jeff Wayne on June 11,2010 | 07:01 PM
I have a sea scape painted by Franz Wallis (Waldner) and would like to get more information on it.
Posted by Ed Hattem on April 21,2010 | 12:51 PM
We also have a lovely painting by J Kugler SEN. . It measures 50"X 28" of Portofino Italy. Our painting is also signed J Kugler SEN in the lower right hand corner.I would appreciate any more information on this artist, and possible value of the piece. The painting is approximately 40 years old.
Doris Koski March 3,2010
Posted by Doris on March 4,2010 | 11:02 PM
+ View All Comments