ISBN: PB: 9780300274264

ISBN: HB: 9780300251920

Yale University Press

February 2024

456 pp.

23,5x15,6 cm

47 black&white illus.

PB:
12.99 GBP
QTY:
HB:
27.50 GBP
QTY:

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Goering's Man in Paris

The Story of a Nazi Art Plunderer and His World

Bruno Lohse (1911-2007) was one of the most notorious art plunderers in history. Appointed by Hermann Goring to Hitler's special art looting agency, he went on to supervise the systematic theft and distribution of over 22,000 artworks, largely from French Jews; helped Goring develop an enormous private art collection; and staged twenty private exhibitions of stolen art in Paris's Jeu de Paume museum during the war. By the 1950s Lohse was officially denazified but back in the art dealing world, offering looted masterpieces to American museums. After his death, dozens of paintings by Renoir, Monet, and Pissarro, among others, were found in his Zurich bank vault and adorning the walls of his Munich home.

Jonathan Petropoulos spent nearly a decade interviewing Lohse and continues to serve as an expert witness for Holocaust restitution cases. Here he tells the story of Lohse's life, offering a critical examination of the postwar art world.

About the author

Jonathan Petropoulos is the John V. Croul Professor of European History at Claremont McKenna College in Southern California. He is the author of "Art as Politics in the Third Reich" (1996), "The Faustian Bargain: The Art World in Nazi Germany" (2000), and "Royals and the Reich: The Princes von Hessen in Nazi Germany" (2006). He previously served as Research Director for Art and Cultural Property on the Presidential Advisory Committee for Holocaust Assets in the United States.