Hitler’s
goddaughter is dead. The New York Times reported today that
Edda Göring, the only daughter of Reichsmarschall
Hermann Göring, the highest ranking officer in the German Nazi army, died on December
21, 2018, in Munich. She was 80 years
old.
Notwithstanding
her father’s starring role in the Holocaust, Ms. Göring assured the journalist
Gerald Posner, for his book Hitler’s
Children: Sons and Daughters of Third Reich Leaders:
I
loved him very much, and it was obvious how much he loved me. My only memories of him are such loving ones. I cannot see him any other way.
Yes, love
is blind, and there are none are so blind as those who will not see. Ms. Göring seems to have had her head firmly
buried in the sand. Per the obituary:
Hermann Goering, who was known for his
lavish lifestyle, accumulated a vast collection of looted jewelry, furniture
and artwork during the war. The German
government seized most of his collection — property that Ms. Goering said
rightfully belonged to her and her mother. “It was all profit for the government,” she
said, “and of course I did not receive anything.”
And that
may have been all to the good, since receiving stolen goods is a crime.
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| Edda’s Christening, with Hitler in attendance, Göring in white uniform |
Göring’s
position as second in command in the Nazi Reich
meant he could get anything he wanted—zoo animals, jewels, antiques, morphine,
and art. His appetite for the latter seems
to have exceeded even his drug addiction.
Between 1939 and 1944, Göring acquired 4,263 individual works of art,
including 1,375 paintings, almost all of them confiscated.
The party line enabled his collecting. In 1933, the Nazi Party decreed that all public institutions be purged of “degenerate art,” meaning modern French and German cubists, expressionists, and impressionists. Think van Gogh, Matisse, Picasso, Monet, Chagall, Kirchner, Dix. Purged works were shown at state-sponsored degenerate art exhibitions to educate the German people as to the types of art that were considered incompatible with Nazi principles. But as with all dictatorships, the rules were for the little people, and some degenerate artworks found their way into the private collections of senior party members, including Göring.
What
started as a racist ideological teaching tool soon became a systematic
government policy of looting. It began
in Austria in 1938, spread to Poland in 1939, and from there it followed the
German army into France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Nazi
bureaus for confiscation were set up in the newly occupied territories, and the
bureaucrats kept meticulous records. They
started with the Jews and Göring led the effort.
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Göring’s Ledger
|
In 1940, he established the official Nazi
office of the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter
Rosenberg to confiscate important art collections in western Nazi-occupied
Europe. The spoils came predominantly from
Jewish collectors and dealers and were stored in the Jeu de Paume in Paris between 1940 and 1944. Göring
visited the repurposed orangerie at
least 20 times to select works for himself, his wife, and his homes. He kept a detailed ledger of his collection
in his own hand. Sarah Wildman describes
the catalog in The New Yorker (12.02.2016):
The
folder is, at first glance, unremarkable: gray, archival, tied with a small, neat ecru
ribbon. Jotted in pencil is a notation: “Collection
GOERING, inventaire des peintures.” Inside is a ledger, brittle with age but well
preserved, its handwritten notations spanning two-hundred-odd pages and eleven
years. The first is from April 1933: a listing for a Venus painted in oil on wood
by Jacopo de’ Barbari, purchased in Rome for twelve thousand lira, displayed in
a private office of Carinhall,
[his] hunting estate
outside Berlin…. One thousand three hundred and seventy-five
paintings follow this Venus, all of them carefully recorded: date of receipt, title of painting, painter,
description, collection of origin, and destination. Tintoretto, Renoir, Rubens, Monet, Corot, van
Gogh, Botticelli, a large group of Cranach; it goes on. After 1940, the pace of acquisition becomes
frantic, obsessive, and the names of the European masters are often matched in
provenance with names of some of the greatest art-collecting families and
dealers of the early twentieth century: Goudstikker,
Rothschild, Rosenberg, Wildenstein. It
all stops abruptly in the spring of 1944.
![]() |
Allied Soldiers Examine Looted Artworks
|
![]() |
Carinhall
|
For all his
collecting fervor, Göring was an art gourmand, not a gourmet, and his eyes were
bigger than his ample stomach. The New Yorker: “His haul was hung carelessly in his enormous
hunting lodge: layered on the walls,
without regard for presentation, origin, or appreciation.” Perhaps Edda didn’t notice her father’s greedy
excess, enjoyed at the expense of those with genuine taste. After all, love is blind.
Keep it
real,





Your mention of Sarah Wildman (writing about looted art) moves me to recommend her Holocaust-related family story, Paper Love. Excellent and available in paperback.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I'll add it to my reading list, along with Bad Blood, which people are raving about. And I heard it first from YOU!
DeleteA wonderful book on the subject of confiscated art is The Hare With Amber Eyes, by Edmund de Waal, whose family was among the super rich and had their possessions, inlcuding art and antiques, stolen by the Nazis in Vienna.
ReplyDeleteI'll be on the lookout for that! Thanks.
Delete