Stuff Digital Edition

A deep dive into Nazi art obsession

Hitler vs Picasso and the Others (E, 94 mins)

Directed by Claudio Poli Reviewed by Graeme Tuckett ★★★1⁄2

That the Nazis orchestrated a mass programme of looting and forced selling of art works across Europe isn’t really new information.

But this 2018 documentary, that has unexpectedly landed in a few New Zealand cinemas this past week, takes a deep dive into a couple of lesser-known aspects of what the Nazis perpetrated – and offers some interesting speculation as to their motivations.

Hitler and his gangsters coveted anything that could give their squalid enterprise a veneer of civilisation. And art was top of the list.

Hitler and Goering even became unofficial competitors – with handshake agreements on ‘‘the rules’’ – in their race to acquire the greatest collection of masterpieces. Hitler favoured family and classical scenes. Goering preferred pictures of hunting and nudes.

Paintings and sculptures were stolen from galleries and museums, or were ‘‘purchased’’ at ridiculously low prices, sometimes with the promise of a visa for the owner to leave occupied Europe as a part of the deal. The visas often did not eventuate. Many collectors, dealers and curators were sent to the concentration camps.

Hitler vs Picasso and the Others covers some of this grim history and includes some new details on the infamous Gurlitt hoard – 1100 artworks, allegedly lost in the Dresden firestorm, discovered in a musty Munich apartment in 2012.

Less known – by me, anyway – is the story of how the Nazis curated a selection of ‘‘degenerate art’’ – works by Klee, Matisse, Kandinsky and many others – which they exhibited with the aim of eliciting disgust at the ‘‘immoral’’ practices of the modern – often Jewish – painters. Some two million people visited, and the Nazis were forced to remove some pieces from the exhibition.

This is an unfocused documentary that seems to be trying to tell three or four quite separate stories. But, even if it does play a little like a cut-down version of a longer series, Hitler vs Picasso still has fascinating moments, some unique insights and a wealth of personal – often heartbreaking – histories to tell.

Hitler vs Picasso and the Others is now screening in select cinemas.

Entertainment

en-nz

2021-12-04T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-12-04T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://fairfaxmedia.pressreader.com/article/282467122177415

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