Become a Member
Life

The forgotten treasure hunt

Robert Edsel on the soldiers who tracked down thousands of Nazi-looted artworks.

August 20, 2009 11:41
“Monuments Men” display art looted by the Nazis, including Portrait of a Lady, held by James Rorimer.

By

Jenni Frazer,

Jenni Frazer

4 min read

Robert Edsel reaches to the side of his seat and produces a large cardboard box, adorned with the black and red of the Nazi swastika. With the air of a conjurer, he puts on a pair of white gloves and draws out of the box a leather-bound album, its cover barely clinging to the hinges.

It is hard not to be uncomfortable in the presence of this book. It is one of a number of albums assembled by Alfred Rosenberg, the Nazis’ leading racial theorist and head of the ERR, the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, the primary Nazi looting organisation. The Nazis’ meticulous record-keeping is evident in this album, in which Rosenberg and his staff gave every piece of art they stole an ERR number and a code which showed from whom it had been taken.

The first entry in this album is the 18th-century Portrait of a Lady by Nicolas de Largillière, which once belonged to the Rothschild family in Paris. It had been looted along with hundreds of other pieces, and cynically assigned the number R 437, meaning that it was the 437th piece of art that the Nazis stole from the Rothschilds.

So how and why is Robert Edsel, a Dallas businessman, clutching an album which Hitler regularly looked through in order to consider how best to develop his collection of stolen art?

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.