Foundation bets on Monuments Men card decks to help find missing art

The Dallas-based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art has created a deck of cards featuring Nazi-looted art in hopes of locating the missing works. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

The Dallas-based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art has created a deck of cards featuring Nazi-looted art in hopes of locating the missing works. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

DALLAS (AP) – A group dedicated to finishing the work of World War II’s Monuments Men is betting on a deck of playing cards – and reward money – to help find missing works of art taken by the Nazis. Inspired by the U.S. military’s history of creating playing cards related to missions, the Dallas-based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art on March 23 announced the creation of the deck focusing on works – including paintings, sculptures and reliquaries – they believe still exist.

“What is needed is to raise awareness about what is missing,” said Anna Bottinelli, the foundation’s president. “Because you might know of a friend who has a beautiful painting on the wall and you don’t even question that that painting belongs to someone else.”

Robert Edsel, founder and chairman of the Monuments Men foundation, said the release of the deck of cards represents "a chance for people to do the right thing, to come forward, to address the problem." Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

Robert Edsel, founder and chairman of the Dallas-based Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art, said the release of the deck of cards represents “a chance for people to do the right thing, to come forward, to address the problem.” Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

The group, which is offering rewards of up to $25,000 for information leading to the recovery of each cultural object featured in the deck, will highlight a few of the cards each week on their social media.

Bottinelli said the foundation worked with museums, law enforcement and owners of lost art as they narrowed down which works to feature, which include those by Vincent van Gogh, Caravaggio and Claude Monet.

The Monuments Men Foundation is offering a cash reward of up to $25,000 for information leading to the recovery of each artwork and object featured in its deck of playing cards picturing Nazi-looted works. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

The Monuments Men Foundation is offering a cash reward of up to $25,000 for information leading to the recovery of each artwork and object featured in its deck of playing cards picturing Nazi-looted works. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

One, a pastel by Edgar Degas titled Portrait of Mlle. Gabrielle Diot that was taken by the Nazis from a home in France in 1940, is known to have been sold in the mid-1970s to an unknown Swiss collector.

“Many of these have resurfaced in the recent past – even as late as 2008 – in auctions,” Bottinelli said.

The deck, being sold through the foundation and the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, is a nod to a U.S. military tradition that includes a deck featuring the most-wanted fugitives from the Iraq War and one from WWII designed to help soldiers identify aircrafts, Bottinelli said.

Pre-orders for the Monuments Men Foundation WWII Most Wanted Art deck of cards will be accepted from March 23 through April 6. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

Pre-orders for the Monuments Men Foundation WWII Most Wanted Art deck of cards will be accepted from March 23 through April 6. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

FBI Special Agent Christopher McKeogh, a New York-based member of the agency’s Art Crime Team, said he thinks there’s a misconception that because it’s been nearly 80 years since the end of the war, that most of the missing art has been found.

“There’s still a lot of artwork to still be on the lookout for,” McKeogh said, noting that the Nazi’s looting was “on a scale that is really hard to comprehend.”

McKeogh said that in some cases, people haven’t realized an artwork’s past until taking it to a gallery or an auction house.

“In those cases, we’ll take steps to seize it and hopefully repatriate the artwork,” McKeogh said, adding that once such a history is uncovered, “owners are usually very willing” to have it returned.

“We can never undo the atrocities of the war, but any little thing that we can do to reunite one of these works with the heirs, it’s an important thing,” McKeogh said.

Robert Edsel, founder and chairman of the Monuments Men foundation, said that for those who do realize they own looted art, “this is a chance for people to do the right thing, to come forward, to address the problem.”

The leaders of the Monuments Men Foundation hope their deck of cards will lead to the recovery of at least some of the featured works. An Edgar Degas pastel, ‘Portrait of Mlle. Gabrielle Diot,’ stolen by Nazis from a French home in 1940, is believed to have been sold during the 1970s to a Swiss collector. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

The leaders of the Monuments Men Foundation hope their deck of cards will lead to the recovery of at least some of the featured works. An Edgar Degas pastel, ‘Portrait of Mlle. Gabrielle Diot,’ stolen by Nazis from a French home in 1940, is believed to have been sold during the 1970s to a Swiss collector. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

Edsel started the foundation in 2007 to honor the Monuments Men, the group of men and women from Allied countries, many with art expertise, who served during WWII to protect cultural treasures as battles waged, and after the war helped return artwork plundered by the Nazis to the rightful owners.

He has written several books on the Monuments Men, including one that the movie The Monuments Men, starring and directed by George Clooney, was based on.

The foundation gets frequent calls from people wondering about objects from the war, and has during the years helped return more than 30, including a 16th-century tapestry taken by a U.S. officer from Adolf Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest retreat near the end of the war. The officer’s family gave the tapestry to a German museum in 2016.

The two jokers in the deck each spotlight a set of Nazi photo albums of artwork that have missing volumes. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

The two jokers in the deck each spotlight a set of Nazi photo albums of artwork that have missing volumes. Image courtesy of the Monuments Men Foundation

In addition to the 52 works of art in the deck, two cards – the jokers – each feature a set of Nazi photo albums of artwork which have missing volumes.

There’s reason to hope someone might come across one: The foundation has already found five that had been brought home by U.S. soldiers after the war as souvenirs.

“It has always been a joy for us to see how much gratitude there was on both parties: The party that was returning something and the party that was receiving,” Bottinelli said.

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By JAMIE STENGLE, Associated Press

This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Christopher McKeogh’s name.

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