LONDON – Watercolors and sketches attributed to Adolf Hitler are up for sale today, forcing a tiny auction house in southwest England to install multiple telephone lines to accommodate an expected crush of bidders from Canada to New Zealand.
The 21 watercolors and two sketches were found in a farmhouse in Belgium, not far from where Hitler – then an aspiring artist – was stationed in Flanders during World War I.
The anonymous owners of the works – mostly landscapes – had the paper tested to determine its age, confirmed the signature and matched landmarks in the paintings to sites where Hitler was posted, said Chris Walton, a spokesman for Jefferys Auctioneers at Lostwithiel in Cornwall.
Still, it is impossible to say with certainty whether Hitler painted them. The experts who authenticated them in the 1980s are now dead. Even so, the works could sell for up to $8,000 apiece, Walton said.
“Some people would consider the sale somewhat controversial, but the pieces were executed so long ago – nearly 100 years ago – that they now just represent something of the past,” Walton said.
Dealing with Hitler’s work and other items related to the Nazi regime, which systematically killed 6 million Jews, has always been a thorny issue.
In many European countries, including Germany, it is illegal to buy, own or sell Nazi memorabilia. The Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., has hundreds of Nazi-related pieces – including four Hitler paintings – but they are not on display.
Despite the sensitivities, items associated with Hitler are still in demand.
Hitler’s works had dramatic skies, detailed architectural structures, muted colors and rudimentary people. He applied to the Vienna School of Fine Arts – and was rejected.
“The paintings don’t distinguish him as an artist but more a competent draftsman,” said Terry Charman with the Imperial War Museum in London, which has Hitler’s last will and testament. “No one is buying them for works of art. They’re buying them because they were done by one of the most infamous people of the 20th century.”
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