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 4 of 5)
The lessons of the past are especially important to Pomrenze, a native of Kiev who immigrated to the United States at age 2, after his father was killed in the Ukrainian pograms of 1919. "The Ukrainians killed 70,000 Jews that year," says Pomrenze, who took quiet pride in helping to right the balance by his wartime service.
The Nazis recorded their thefts in detailed ledgers that eventually fell into the hands of officers like Lt. Bernard Taper, who joined the Monuments squad in 1946. "The Nazis made our job easier," says Taper. "They said where they got the stuff. They would describe the painting and give its measurements, and they would often say where they had sent the collection. So we had some very good clues."
Indeed, the clues were so good that Taper's colleagues had secured most of the high-value paintings—prime Vermeers, da Vincis, Rembrandts—by the time Taper arrived on the scene. That left him to investigate widespread looting by German citizens who pilfered from the Nazi hoard in the time between Germany's collapse and the Allies' arrival.
"There were probably thousands of pieces in this second wave, the looting of the looted," says Taper. "Not the most famous objects but many valuable ones. We looked for stuff on the black market, made regular checks among the art dealers and went out into the countryside to follow up promising leads."
Taper scoured the hills around Berchtesgaden, near the Austrian border, to recover the remains of Goering's vast art collection, thought to contain more than 1,500 looted paintings and sculptures. As Soviet troops pressed toward eastern Germany in the last days of war, Goering had feverishly loaded art from his Carinhall hunting lodge into several trains and dispatched them to air raid shelters near Berchtesgaden for safekeeping. "Goering managed to unload two of the cars, but not the third one, which was left on a siding when his entourage fled into the arms of the Seventh Army," he says.
The rumor quickly spread that the reichsmarshal's unguarded car was loaded with schnapps and other good things, and it was not long before thirsty Bavarians were swarming over it. "The lucky first ones did get schnapps," says Taper. "Those who came later had to be satisfied with 15th-century paintings and Gothic church sculptures and French tapestries and whatever else they could lay their hands on—including glasses and silver flatware with the famous H.G. monogram."
The loot disappeared into the green hills. "That country was so beautiful—it looked like something out of Heidi," Taper, 90, recalls while flipping through his official investigative reports from those days. He often traveled with Lt. Edgar Breitenbach, a Monuments Man who made the rounds disguised as a peasant, in lederhosen and a tiny pipe that kept him wreathed in a corona of smoke. They recovered much of the loot—a school of Rogier van der Weyden painting, a 13th-century Limoges reliquary and Gothic statues they tracked to the home of a woodcutter named Roth. "Herr Roth said he wasn't a thief," Taper recalls. "He said these statues were lying on the ground in the rain with people stepping on them. He said he took pity on them and took them home." Taper reclaimed them.
Not all of the cargo from Goering's schnapps train remained intact. During the melee by the rail siding, local women tussled over a 15th-century Aubusson tapestry until a local official suggested a Solomon-like solution: "Cut it up and divide it," he urged. And so they did, taking the tapestry away in four pieces. Taper and Breitenbach found its remains in 1947, by which time the hanging had been divided again. "One of the pieces was being used for curtains, one for a kid's bed," says Taper. The rest had vanished.
This was also the fate of one of the most important objects of Nazi looting, Raphael's Portrait of a Young Man, an early-16th-century painting that disappeared in the final days of the war. Over many months, Taper searched for the painting, which had been the pride of the Czartoryski Museum in Krakow until 1939, when one of Hitler's art agents snapped it up for the Führer, along with Leonardo's Lady With an Ermine and Rembrandt's Landscape With the Good Samaritan.
As far as Taper could determine, all three paintings had been rushed out of Poland in the winter of 1945 with Hans Frank, the country's Nazi governor general, as the Soviets bore down from the east. Arrested by Allies near Munich in May of that year, Frank surrendered the Leonardo and the Rembrandt, but the Raphael was gone. "It may have been destroyed in the fighting," says Taper. "Or it may have gone home with the Soviets. Or it may have been left on the road from Krakow to Munich. We just don't know." Unlike the other paintings, it was on panel, not canvas, so it would have been harder to transport and conceal. More than 60 years later, the Raphael remains missing.
Taper became a staff writer for The New Yorker and a professor of journalism at the University of California at Berkeley after the war. He still dreams about the Raphael. "It's always in color, even though all I ever had was a little black-and-white photograph." He pauses a long time. "I still think I should have found that damn thing."
Taper is one of a diminishing fraternity. Of the original 350 Monuments Men (including a score of Monuments Women) no more than 12 are known to be alive—just one reason a retired Texas oilman and philanthropist named Robert M. Edsel has made it his mission to call attention to their wartime deeds. "Theirs was a feat that must be characterized as miraculous," says Edsel, who has written about Taper, Ettlinger and their colleagues in a recent book, Rescuing Da Vinci; co-produced a documentary, The Rape of Europa; and persuaded Congress to pass resolutions recognizing their service. He has also established the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art to safeguard artistic treasures during armed conflict.
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Comments (37)
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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
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