Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Historian got close, maybe too close, to Nazi art looter

Book delves into ‘Goring’s Man in Paris’

- By Nina Siegal

By the late 1990s, most of the Nazi art experts who helped loot European Jews were either dead or living quiet lives under the radar. Not so with Bruno Lohse, who served as the art agent to Reichsmars­chall Hermann Goring, Hitler’s right-hand man.

In 1998, Jonathan Petropoulo­s, a European history professor at Claremont McKenna College in California, met Lohse in Munich. An effete, imperious figure standing 6-foot-4 and weighing over 300 pounds at the time, Lohse, who had “inextingui­shable self-importance,” as Petropoulo­s writes, welcomed the chance to regale the American scholar with his war stories. Over the next nine years, they met more than two dozen times.

Lohse would often pull out a box of old photograph­s and mementos, allowing Petropoulo­s to peer over his shoulder and to pepper him with questions. When Lohse died in 2007 at 96, he bequeathed that box to Petropoulo­s, who used it as source material for his new book, “Goring’s Man in Paris: The Story of a Nazi Art Plunderer and His World,” out in January from Yale University Press.

Any relationsh­ip between an informatio­n-seeking scholar and a former Nazi is bound to be a complicate­d one, and Petropoulo­s makes clear in the prologue that he had no intention of befriendin­g Lohse. He acknowledg­es, however, that he “soon appreciate­d his charms” and came to enjoy their meetings over liver dumpling soup — which provided the professor with access to a lost world.

“I always tried to keep a certain distance, and there was always an element of a game being played, a cat-and-mouse game,” Petropoulo­s said in an interview. “That game became a little more spirited with time, a little more like catch me if you can.”

Lohse was jailed at the end of World War II and investigat­ed. He was tried and acquitted in France in 1950.

Lynn Nicholas’ landmark 1994 book on the Third Reich’s pillaging, “The Rape of Europa,” positions Lohse as one of several agents working for the SS in Paris who controlled “exchanges” of modernist art (which the Nazis called degenerate) for their more prized old masters. “Goring’s Man in Paris” sets him as one of the primary planets orbiting Goring in a solar system that included Nazi art traders Alois Miedl, Walter Andreas Hofer, Maria Almas Dietrich and Karl Haberstock.

Petropoulo­s argues not only that Lohse was instrument­al in Goring’s looting, but also that he stole many works for himself, keeping some hidden until his death. Petropoulo­s reports that Lohse was personally

involved in emptying Jewish homes and boasted to a German officer that he had beaten Jewish owners to death “with his own hands.”

Lohse returned to the art trade in the 1950s from a new base in Munich, where other former Nazi art experts had also gone back to work, trading mostly within a “circle of trust” in Germany and Switzerlan­d.

What emerges from Petropoulo­s’ research is a portrait of a charismati­c and nefarious figure who tainted everyone he

touched. It explores the tangled relationsh­ips linking Nazi dealers to scores of other participan­ts in the art trade.

The twist of this scholarly enterprise, however, comes when Petropoulo­s finds himself in the web. In 2000, he became involved in a search for the “Fischer Pissarro,” a Paris street scene by Camille Pissarro stolen from the Vienna home of a prominent German Jewish family and sold at auction in 1940.

The heirs suspected the work might be linked

to Lohse and contacted Petropoulo­s for his help. With the aid of a former Lohse associate, art dealer Peter Griebert, Petropoulo­s located the work at a private foundation in Liechtenst­ein — but as it turned out (to his surprise, as he tells it), that foundation was owned by Lohse. It’s unclear how Lohse came into possession of the work.

This “misadventu­re,” as Petropoulo­s called it in an article in the Los Angeles Times, led the heirs to accuse him of extorting them for charging fees and a percentage of the sale proceeds. He was never charged with a crime, but Petropoulo­s stepped down from his position as director of the Center for the Study of the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights at Claremont McKenna.

The college, in a statement, said it conducted an investigat­ion and found that Petropoulo­s “adhered to applicable contractua­l and legal obligation­s” while attempting to aid in recovering the painting. He remains on its faculty. Petropoulo­s concedes that

he should probably not have gotten involved and writes in the book that he never earned any money from the work.

“I was trying to be helpful and achieve a return, but things developed the way they did,” he said.

The chapter that recounts this tale takes a turn into territory reminiscen­t of Janet Malcolm’s “The Journalist and the Murderer,” which explores the ethical consequenc­es when a writer gets too close to a source. As Petropoulo­s falls down this rabbit hole, “Goring’s Man in Paris” becomes a more complex read, raising questions about reliabilit­y in every facet of the art world.

“For me, the greatest ethical challenge arose from the mutual feeling of a sort of friendship that emerged in my relationsh­ip with Lohse,” Petropoulo­s writes. “I told him in no uncertain terms that I thought what he did in the war was reprehensi­ble and I in no way condoned his actions. He seemed unperturbe­d by this statement — indeed, it brought a smile to his face.”

 ?? BRUNO LOHSE PAPERS ?? Bruno Lohse, second from right, leads Hermann Goring, center, on a tour of seized artworks. Historian Jonathan Petropoulo­s met dozens of times with Lohse, a complicate­d relationsh­ip he explores in “Goring’s Man in Paris.”
BRUNO LOHSE PAPERS Bruno Lohse, second from right, leads Hermann Goring, center, on a tour of seized artworks. Historian Jonathan Petropoulo­s met dozens of times with Lohse, a complicate­d relationsh­ip he explores in “Goring’s Man in Paris.”
 ?? JONATHAN PETROPOULO­S ?? A stolen painting by Camille Pissarro. In 2000, Jonathan Petropoulo­s became involved in a search for the stolen painting.
JONATHAN PETROPOULO­S A stolen painting by Camille Pissarro. In 2000, Jonathan Petropoulo­s became involved in a search for the stolen painting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States