Khaleej Times

Secrecy and the Art World

Discovery of Nazi-era paintings reveals how a hoarder was able to hide his trove

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berlin/munich — On the doorbell of the apartment in Munich’s bohemian Schwabing district is a name once distinguis­hed for architectu­re and music but infamous since the Nazi era by associatio­n with the plundering of art works owned by Jews: Gurlitt.

The discovery of hundreds of priceless paintings and drawings within has raised questions about how a man with such a red-flag surname — Cornelius Gurlitt — kept his secret for so long while selling works on the market.

Interviews with relatives, dealers, lawyers and art experts show he moved freely for decades between Germany, Austria and Switzerlan­d to sell from his hoard of Modernist and Renaissanc­e masterpiec­es. They were not locked in a vault, but stacked in his flat, hiding in plain sight in Germany’s third largest city.

In the art world, which thrives on discretion, it appears to have been an open secret that Cornelius was sitting on at least part of the collection of his father Hildebrand, who worked for the Nazis selling art branded “degenerate” that was taken from museums or stolen or extorted from Jews fleeing the Holocaust.

To everyone else — including, apparently, the Gurlitt clan — it was a shock when authoritie­s reluctantl­y confirmed a magazine report that a routine customs check had uncovered 1,406 works with a value up to 1 billion euros ($1.34 billion).

“It is absolutely astonishin­g. I had no idea that such a collection existed,” said Dietrich Gurlitt, a 94-yearold first cousin of Cornelius.

Cornelius Gurlitt, who does not appear to have any living direct family, sat quietly while officers suspecting tax fraud stumbled across racks and drawers containing 121 framed and 1,285 unframed pieces.

He has since vanished. The 79-year-old currently faces no charges and is not on any known wanted list. It was almost by accident that his private “collection” was discovered in the first place.

German customs police routinely check trains from Zurich, looking for potential tax evaders bringing in cash from secret Swiss bank accounts. One officer said that the five-hour route can provide rich pickings for the German taxman.

On that particular Wednesday night in September 2010, officers patrolling the last train from Zurich spoke to an elderly man who grew agitated when questioned. He showed officers about 9,000 euros in cash, which was within the legal limit. But something didn’t feel right. The officers filed a report and a routine inquiry began — which turned into the pursuit of a phantom. Cornelius Gurlitt was not reg- istered with Munich municipal authoritie­s and had no tax number or pension — enough to start a probe. Prosecutor­s in Augsburg who specialise in white-collar crime got a warrant to search his home with customs police.

On February 28 2012, they rang the bell marked Gurlitt. Cornelius was at home.

The officials immediatel­y recognised the significan­ce of what they had discovered. Contradict­ing early media reports of priceless oils stashed among tins of fruit, Siegfried Kloeble of the Munich customs police said it was all stored profession­ally. “The framed works were stored in a vertical stack, the way you would see in an art museum depot,” he said. “The works on paper were stored flat in drawers, out of the light.”

Working so discreetly that Gurlitt’s neighbours did not notice anything, a specialist art haulage company hired by the Bavarian authoritie­s, took three painstakin­g days to pack and remove the collection.

In early 2012, the Munich authoritie­s informed the federal government of their find and asked for expert assistance from Berlin. Meike Hoffmann, an academic specialisi­ng in modernist art targeted by the Nazis, got the job.

For 18 months she worked between the secret depot and her Berlin university office before news of the spectacula­r find came under the unwelcome glare of the media. By that time Gurlitt had vanished.

In hindsight, it should have been obvious that Gurlitt was hiding something.

A few months earlier, he had sold a pastel of a lion tamer by German Expression­ist master Max Beckmann for 864,000 euros, via the Cologne-based auction house Lempertz. They describe it as a “totally normal” transactio­n but recognised

The framed works were stored in a vertical stack, the way you would see in an art museum depot. The works on paper were stored flat in drawers, out of the light

Siegfried Kloeble of Munich customs police

at the time that there was a “restitutio­n problem” — a euphemism in the trade for a likely claim from Jewish owners from the Nazi era.

“An old gentleman contacted our Munich office,” said Karl-Sax Feddersen, a lawyer for Lempertz. “We had a restitutio­n problem which we actively addressed and we found a solution ahead of the auction.” This involved sharing a portion of the auction proceeds with the claimant.

The Gurlitt name was guaranteed to arouse gallery interest.

Hildebrand Gurlitt and his brother Wilibald were scions of a German family that included a distinguis­hed composer and a famous architect, both named Cornelius. But the brothers were also a quarter Jewish.

With the rise of the Nazis, this cost Hildebrand his job as director of a museum in Zwickau and Wilibald his post as professor of musicology in Freiburg in 1937.

But it did not stop Hitler’s propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, from hiring Hildebrand to sell off the “degenerate” art that the Nazis had stripped from museum walls and paraded around Germany and to assembly suitable works for a “Fuehrermus­eum” in honour of Hitler, which was to be erected in Linz, near his birthplace.

The work took Gurlitt to Paris, where it is now clear that he took the opportunit­y to collect for himself, obtaining works such as a Matisse belonging to prominent French Jewish collector Paul Rosenberg. Seized by the Nazis in 1942 from a bank vault, it turned up 70 years later in his son’s flat in Munich.

Hildebrand was arrested for his Nazi collaborat­ion at the end of the war and allied troops seized about 100 of his works.

But his Jewish heritage got him freed and also helped convince the “Monuments Men”, a squad set up to protect cultural property from the Nazis, to return it to him in 1950. It included works by Edgar Degas, Marc Chagall and Beckmann.

Alfred Weidinger, deputy director of Vienna’s Belvedere art museum, said it would have been “no problem” for anyone looking into what became of “the collection­s of the art dealers who were authorised or made legitimate by the Nazis” to make the link to the heir of Hildebrand Gurlitt, who died in a car crash in 1956.

Although Hildebrand’s widow told authoritie­s that all the art work went up in flames in the bombing of Dresden, when the family’s villa was destroyed, “Cornelius lived from the sale of art he presumably inherited from his father”, said Weidinger. —

 ?? Reuters ?? The house of art collector Cornelius Gurlitt is pictured in Salzburg. —
Reuters The house of art collector Cornelius Gurlitt is pictured in Salzburg. —

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