Jul 15, 2021
Cultural property at the Oberfinanzdirektion München Bundesarchiv: archives
Jun 22, 2021
Bruno Lohse Nazi Art Looter Transcription of ALIU Detailed Interrogation Report NARA RG239 DIR 6
The text below is a transcription of a document in the National Archives concerning Nazi art looting that was declassified in 1975. It concerns the notorious Nazi art looter, Bruno Lohse. This Detailed Interrogation Report was written by Monuments Man and OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit member James S. Plaut in 1945. It detailed the interrogation of Nazi art looter Bruno Lohse conducted from June 15, 1945 to August 15, 1945.
NARA : copy of transcription D. I. R. # 6 - Bruno Lohse, 1945-1946
A photocopy of the Detailed Interrogation Report Number 6 can be downloaded here: Download PDF
The text, transcribed in a digital searchable text, is below
Jun 21, 2021
Let's run 1000 NEPIP provenances that contain Munich through the Looted Art Detector
In the previous post we gathered one thousand provenances of artworks listed (for the most part) by American museums on the Nazi Era Provenance Internet Portal that contain the word "Munich" or "München" in the provenance text.
In this post, using the Looted Art Detector developed at the Swiss Glamhack2020 and Glamhack2021, we rank artworks that contain a mention of Munich according to the criteria of "Uncertainty".
Jun 19, 2021
The Munich Connection
Research Question: How did Nazi plunder get from a cabal of looted art dealers in Munich to the art museums of the United States of America?
Which names have replaced theirs in the provenance texts?
Jun 12, 2021
Lostart "Nicht Mehr im Besizt" June 2021
German Lost Art Foundation Database
Objects listed as "No Longer Owned" as of June 2021
"nicht mehr im Besitz"
Number of objects | 49 |
---|---|
Holding | nicht mehr im Besitz |
Description | Die Kunstverwaltung des Bundes verfügt über eine eigene Provenienzdatenbank betreffend den sogenannten Restbestand CCP, die unter folgendem Link zu recherchieren ist: external link |
Jun 9, 2021
Data Visualization Test
How to grasp the scale of the transfer from Jewish art collectors persecuted by the Nazi to museums in the United States, Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland, the Netherlands, as well as countries in South America?
Some experiments in data visualization.
First, an overview (attention: the figures are not real, they are only to test the visualization.)
The Nazis looted so much. Destroyed so many lives. How to represent this in a way that is understandable, meaningful - and actionable?
May 30, 2021
Gurlitt: The scandal continues
When an art historian sees the Gurlitt name in any text, the first thought should be: is it a lie?
CIR 4 LINZ S. Lane Faison describes Hitler's Linz museum as "a monument to Safe Art"
From June 1945 until the spring of 1946, Faison, Plaut, and Rousseau detained and interrogated hundreds of Nazi officials and collaborators on the whereabouts of looted works of art. - Monuments Men Foundation
May 29, 2021
"Special Nazi law covered the seizure of Jewish and enemy property." - CIR 4 Chapter IX Conclusions and Recommendations
"Special Nazi law covered the seizure of Jewish and enemy property."
Excerpt from Art Looting Investigation Unit Consolidated Interrogation Report Number 4: Linz
May 28, 2021
Karl W. Bümming: Key figure in movement of looted works of art between Germany and Switzerland.
"Key figure in movement of looted works of art between Germany and Switzerland."
Question for provenance researchers: Who was Karl W. Bümming?
CIR 1
Post-War Reports :
Activity of the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg in France: C.I.R. No.1 15 August 1945 (a transcribed fully searchable text of the Report)
May 27, 2021
"Dutch sources have discovered lists of over 250 items which were shipped to HERBST from Holland" - ALIU CIR 4 DR. HERBST, Dorotheum, Vienna
Question for provenance researchers: Who was Dr. Herbst?
May 26, 2021
Nazi Art Looting Networks: Adolf Wuester
Abels Brothers, Hermann | Cologne, Komoedienstrasse 26 | Dealers | Specialists in 16th to 19th century painting and graphic arts |
Bammann, Hans | Dusseldorf, Blumenstrasse 11 | Dealer, drafted into the army in 1942 and transferred to the ERR in Paris in December 1943 at the request of Lohse and Wuester | Believed to have acted as agent for art purchases in France for museums of Dusseldorf, Cologne, Aachen and Bonn |
Breker, Prof Arno | Starnberg (Buchhof uber Pocha), Bavaria | Celebrated Nazi sculptor, often in Paris during the war | Took part in arranging tour of French artists through Germany |
Goepel, Dr Erhard | Leipzig, Stieghtstrasse 76 | Official Linz agent and buyer in Holland under Posse and Voss | Bought extensively in Holland and also travelled frequently in Belgium and France |
Knothe, Dr | Secretary of the German Embassy, Paris and reported to have worked with Wuester on art matters for von Ribbentrop and possibly Goebbels | ||
Kuetgens, Dr Felix | Aachen, Heinrichsallee 18 | Member of Kunstschutz, Paris | Mentioned as also in charge of Kunstschutz in Serbia and Greece |
Loewenisch, Albert | Cologne Paris, 8 ave Victor Massel | Purchasing agent for the Gauleitung Dusseldorf-Koln-Aachen-Bonn, and one of the official representatives of German museums in France | Contact of Hermssen, Wuester, Weinmueller and Lange |
May, Frau Wismer | Zurich, Seefeldstrasse 90 | Colleague of Wuester in the art section of the German Embassy, Paris | Ardent Nazi and well connected in high Party circles |
Mohnen, Wilhelm Jacob | German national | Captured in Rome, 5 February 1945, after taking refuge in the Vatican | |
Muthmann, Dr | Director of Museum of Krefeld | In contact with Wuester, Paul Cailleux, Dr Kurt Martin and Dr Hopp | |
Pfannstiel, Arthur | Paris | German painter and dealer, resident in Paris before the war | Member of staff of ERR, Bordeaux and of GIS |
Rademacher, Dr Bernard | Bonn | Assistant at the Landesmuseum, Bonn | Agent for art purchases in France |
von Waldthausen | In charge of interior decoration of the German Embassy, Paris, 1940 | Assisted by Wuester, 1942 | |
Wuester, Adolf | Bernau, Bavaria Bonn Schloesel | Painter and amateur dealer, long-time pre-war resident of Paris | Chief agent in France for acquisition of works of art for Ribbentrop |
Blot | Paris | Dealer, dealt with Wuester | |
Cailleux, Paul | Paris, 136 rue du Fbg St Honore | Dealer in contact with Rochlitz, Wuester, Frau Dietrich, Haberstock | Knew Lohse, who claims to have freed his wife from a concentration camp |
Cloots, F G | Paris, 14 rue de l’Abbaye | Small dealer specialising in 17th century Dutch painting | In contact with Wuester and Hofer |
Gairac, Georges | Paris, 17 rue de Seine | French art dealer who sold to Wuester and Bornheim | |
Gerard, Raphael Louis Felix | Paris, 4 ave de Messine | Dealt in confiscated pictures; main source of supply to Wuester and other German buyers | Indicted by French Government (Seine Tribunal, Judge Frapier) |
de Haucke, Cesar Monge | Paris, 14 rue du Cherche-Midi | Dealer active in Paris and New York before the war | Active in Paris during the occupation; in contact with Wuester, Haberstock and Hofer; documentary evidence in Unit files |
Kalebjian, Irene | Paris, 52 bis ave d’Iena | Schenker documents indicate sales to German buyers | One of Wuester’s chief sources |
Leegenhoek, M O | Paris, 1 rue de Rennes/230 blvd Raspail | Belgian national | Prominent restorer and subsequent dealer who sold extensively to Hofer, Lohse, Wendland, Wuester, Dietrich, Haberstock, Miedl, Goepel and the great majority of important German purchasers |
Mandl, Victor | Paris, 9 rue du Boetie | German refugee dealer, formerly active in Berlin | Highly important figure in German art purchases in Paris |
Montag, Charles | Sevres Meudon Val Fleury, 72 rue de Paris | Swiss; naturalised French | Artist and dealer |
Renand, Georges | Paris, 30 quai de Bethune | Sold to Ribbentrop through Wuester | Schenker documents indicate sales to German buyers |
Schmit, Jean | Paris, 22 rue de Charonne | Important antique dealer and decorating concern | Dealt with Bornheim, Angerer, Haberstock and other Germans brought to him by Wuester |
Schoeller, Andre | Paris, 13 rue de Teheran | Well known expert in French 19th century painting | President of the Art Editors Syndicate and appraiser for the Hotel Drouot |
Toulinot (Toulino) | Paris, 8 ave Victor Massel | Small dealer | Partner of Loewenisch |
de Trevise, Duc | Paris | Pre-war sponsor and friend of Rochlitz and Wuester | |
Trotti, Count Rene Avogli | Paris, 1/88 rue de Grenelle | Well known art dealer of Italian birth; in touch with many German art agents during the war, particularly Wuester, an old friend | Also did business with Haberstock |
Wuester Adolf | See Germany | ||
Raeber, Dr Willi | Basle, St Albans Anlage 68 | Prominent art dealer | Vice president of the Swiss syndicate of art dealers and its most active member |
Wendland, Dr Hans | Versoix/Geneva | German national | Art dealer, resident alternately in France, Switzerland, Italy and Germany since World War I |
May 20, 2021
Readings in Nazi looted art: The Rape of Europa by Lynn Nicholas
Published in 1995, Lynn Nicholas' book The Rape of Europa was one of the first to investigate Hitler's massive looting of artworks. Many archives have opened since then and progress with digitization of source documents as well as and museum collections databases following the Washington Declaration have made new material available.
"Voss would now channel his purchase funds, which would surpass those spent by Posse, through his own trusted agents, principal among whom was Hildebrand Gurlitt..."
- The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War by Lynn Nicholas
"Despite their disgust the OSS and MFAA men were human. Craig Smyth, who later had to supervise the house arrest of Hermann Voss, found it difficult to treat so eminent a scholar as a criminal and had him report daily to someone else. Monuments officer Charles Parkhurst, sent to question the widow of Hans Posse, whom he found living on the proceeds of sales of the pathetic contents of two suitcases of family bibelots, described her as a “gentle, elderly person” and broke off his interrogation when she began to weep. In the few answers she did provide it was clear that she was very proud of her husband’s accomplishments. She even showed Parkhurst photographs of Hitler at Posse’s state funeral, but of his actual transactions she clearly knew nothing."
- The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War by Lynn Nicholas
"Plaut doubted that Bruno Lohse had really known the extent of Goering’s evildoing and noted that both he and Fräulein Limberger had become despondent when all was revealed. Rousseau and Faison too, after weeks of questioning Miss Limberger, were convinced that despite the fact that she had read the damning daily correspondence from Hofer to Goering, she bore no blame. When they had finished with her, Faison could not bring himself to leave her at the squalid internment camp to which she had been assigned and instead asked her where she would like to go. She named the Munich dealer Walter Bornheim, he of the suitcases full of francs, and a principal supplier to both Linz and Goering. Faison consented, and left her at the military post in Gräfelfing, where Bornheim lived."
- The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War by Lynn Nicholas
available on Amazon
May 17, 2021
Buried for more than half a century

Altaussee Salt/Art Mine discovery after WW II
Lieutenants Kern & Sieber, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
What must it have been like for Samson Lane Faison, Jr., James S. Plaut, Theodore Rousseau, Jr. and Jean Vlug to watch their reports on Nazi art looting and art dealer networks be buried and lost?

Lieutenants Kern & Sieber, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
On April 23, 2001, I phoned Professor Faison and told him the National Archives was issuing the next day a press release announcing the release of Microfilm Publication M-1782, “OSS Art Looting Investigation Unit Reports, 1945-46.” I told him the microfilmed records—including the detailed, consolidated, and final reports—were being made available on May 8, the 56th anniversary of the U.S. Army’s discovery of the salt mine at Alt Aussee, Austria, where the greatest concentration of Nazi plunder from Western Europe was concealed. I asked him if he minded me making his phone number available if I received press inquiries about the records and the work of the ALIU. He said at his age it was tough enough to get up to change the television channel, much less answer the phone regarding things he had done ages ago and which were well-documented in the records we were making available. So, yes, he did mind.
- "An Office of Strategic Services Monuments Man: S. Lane Faison"
This is the seventh in an ongoing series of posts on real-life Monuments Men. Today’s post is by Dr. Greg Bradsher. See related posts on Sir Charles Leonard Woolley, Walter J. Huchthausen, Seymour J. Pomrenze, Mason Hammond, Edith Standen, and Karol Estreicher.May 16, 2021
May 15, 2021
May 8, 2021
Linz ALMAS
Maria Almas-Dietrich: Nazi art looter
"Art dealer; personal friend of Hitler, and for a time his principal buyer of works of art. One of the most important purchasing agents for Linz. Was under house arrest at Grafing, Bavaria, autumn 1945."
- ALIU 1946 Final Report
Art historians, "Almas" in a provenance text means: dig deep.
The probability of Nazi looting is high.
Below, artworks from the DHM Linz database that contain "Almas" in the provenance.
May 1, 2021
Names of persecuted Austrian Jewish collectors
How to verify the provenance texts of artworks for names that might indicate a history of Nazi looting or persecution?
There are many potential sources and lists.
In this post, we look an official Austrian report from 2008 that contains names of Austrian Jewish collectors whose art collections were plundered by the Nazis.