Blogs across the Smithsonian will give an inside look at the Institution’s archival collections and practices during a month long blogathon in celebration of October’s American Archives Month. See additional posts from our other participating blogs, as well as related events and resources, on the Smithsonian’s Archives Month website.
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Gardens of Versailles draped in camouflage during World War II |
This year’s theme for Archives Month is Hidden Treasures and here at the Archives of American Art, I discovered several collections that literally tell a story about hidden (and hiding) treasures. As background research for a foundation grant proposal to support the archival processing of AAA’s collections that are related to World War II-era art provenance research, I came across the papers and oral histories of several “soldiers” who served in World War II in the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives section of the U.S. Army.
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Men preparing an Aristide Maillol sculpture for transport |
Towards the end of the war, the mission of the Monuments Men changed significantly from identification and protection to one of locating, recovering, and restoring to proper owners artworks and other cultural objects that had been systematically looted by the Nazis -- the extent of which was staggering.The Monuments Men located treasure troves of stolen art and artifacts hidden all across Germany, Bavaria, and Austria – some in castles and others buried in“salt mines.”They saved and recovered some of the greatest works of art in the history of Western civilization, including Jan Van Eyk’s Ghent Altarpiece Adoration of the Mystic Lamband Michelangelo’s Madonna and Child.
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Cases of jewelry confiscated from Maurice Rothschild by the Nazis |
The personal archives and oral history interviews of several members of the unit, including George Stout, Thomas Carr Howe, James Rorimer, Walter William Horn, Walker Hancock, S. Lane Faison, and others tell this fascinating story in archival documents, photographs, and sound recordings (many with transcripts available online).
-- Barbara Aikens is the Chief of Collections Processing at the Archives of American Art.
-- Barbara Aikens is the Chief of Collections Processing at the Archives of American Art.