In 2012 German police confiscated 1,200 works by artists including Matisse, Renoir, Degas and Picasso from the elderly son of one of Hitler’s art dealers. Mary M Lane, the Wall Street Journal’s former art correspondent, explores the controversy that followed the discovery, and explains how the Nazis used art as propaganda, removed ‘degenerate’ Modernist works from display, and looted pieces from Jewish collectors. Off-mint.
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https://integration-5ojmyuq-6wp5anmhke56o.eu-3.magentosite.cloud/hitlers-last-hostages516698Hitler's Last Hostageshttps://integration-5ojmyuq-6wp5anmhke56o.eu-3.magentosite.cloud/media/catalog/product/5/1/516698_c722a221423d8748a542cd8a30cf71f6.jpg7.997.99GBPInStock/History/Non-Fiction/Non-Fiction/Highlights/History/Categories/20th Century History/History/Military History/Categories/World War TwoIn 2012 German police confiscated 1,200 works by artists including Matisse, Renoir, Degas and Picasso from the elderly son of one of Hitler’s art dealers. Mary M Lane, the <I>Wall Street Journal</I>’s former art correspondent, explores the controversy that followed the discovery, and explains how the Nazis used art as propaganda, removed ‘degenerate’ Modernist works from display, and looted pieces from Jewish collectors. <i>Off-mint</i>.Hardback00add-to-cartMary M LaneGeneral242x159mmPublicAffairsHardbackForgery & Art TheftEuropean