Maria Almas-Dietrich, nee Dietrich (born 27 June 1892 in Munich; died 11 November 1971 in Dachau) was one of Hitler's most important art suppliers for his planned FührerMuseum in Linz.
The daughter of a butcher in Munich's Westend, Maria Dietrich became a force in the French art market thanks to her connection to Hitler.[1] In 1920 she gave birth to an illegitimate child. In 1921 she married Ali Almàs, a Turkish journalist of Jewish origin born in Izmir on 1 May 1883, who also wrote under the name “Diamant”.[2][3][4]
Dietrich owned Galerie Almas in Munich[5] located in Munich's Ottostrasse 9 next to the Swiss and American embassies, which dealt in antiques and paintings from the 15th to 19th centuries. She divorced Almas in 1937,[6] but kept the name for the gallery.[7][8]
On 15 January 1940 she was naturalized in the German Reich after swearing she was not Jewish.[9]
Dietrich got close to Adolf Hitler through his photographer Heinrich Hoffmann, and Hitler authorized her to purchase artworks for him without asking permission first. Between 1936 and 1944 Dietrich acquired more than one thousand artworks for Hitler and his Führermuseum, making her one of the most important dealers in the Third Reich.[10] Much of the art she acquired had been looted from Jews.[11][12][13]
In autumn 1945 Almas-Dietrich was arrested and interrogated by the OSS Art Looting Intelligence Unit (ALIU). A special interrogation report about her was drafted. However, it was not published.[14] She was mentioned 22 times in the ALIU Final Report on Nazi-looting of art which noted "Dietrich, Frau Maria Almas. Munich, Gustav Freytagstr 5. Art dealer; personal friend of Hitler, and for a time his principal buyer of works of art. One of the most important purchasing agents for Linz. Was under house arrest at Grafing, Bavaria, autumn 1945."[15]
The Allies suspected that Almas-Dietrich '"like many other dealers" had stashed away quantities of Nazi-looted art. Monuments Man S. Lane Faison recommended that her licence be suspended.[16][17]
After the war, Maria Almas Dietrich returned to Munich and lived in a neighborhood close to other dealers of Nazi-looted art. Despite her deep involvement in Nazi-looted art, she was not troubled by the German authorities. She even made claims for artworks that had been found by the Monuments Men. On 4 March 1949 she addressed claims to Occupation Costs Office because paintings by Grützner, Defregger, Horemans and Braith as well as “5 wooden sculptures of male saints” could no longer be found in the Collecting Point and were presumably stolen.[18] She was one of the exhibitors at the Munich art and antiques fair co-founded by Otto Bernheimer.
Mimi tho Rahde continued the art business after the death of her mother.[19]
The number of Nazi-looted artworks acquired through Dietrich is so great that it requires databases to track them, including the Hitler's Linz Museum database, the Lostart database, the Central Collecting Point Database, the ERR database and others. Many of the artworks she acquired were destined for Hitler's personal collection or his museum in Linz. Others entered the private market for Nazi-looted art via dealers in Switzerland or other intermediaries. A few examples include:
The Austrian Lexicon of Provenance Research places Almas-Dietrich among the top dealers in Nazi looted art under the Third Reich: "Alongside Karl Haberstock and Maria Almas-Dietrich, the art dealer Bruno Lohse was probably one of the most important art dealers in the service of the National Socialist government."[24]
Recent historical research emphasizes Almas-Dietrich's connection to powerful Nazi art looters such as Bruno Lohse, describing her as part of the "solar system that included Nazi art traders such as Alois Miedl, Walter Andreas Hofer, Maria Almas Dietrich and Karl Haberstock"[25]
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty |url=
(help)Ali Almas war ein Schriftsteller (geb. 1883 in Smyrna). Er hielt sich mehrfach in Deutschland auf, um Vorträge zur Förderung der Deutsch-Türkischen Vereinigung zu halten*. Er heiratete 1921 die Münchner Galeristin Maria Dietrich, die nach ihrer Scheidung 1937 den Namen Almas für ihre Kunstgalerie in München weiterführte. Dietrich ist bekannt durch ihre Bildverkäufe an Hitler (insgesamt 270 Bilder).
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help){{cite web}}
: Missing or empty |url=
(help)Maria Almas-Dietrich (1892–1971), geborene Dietrich, betrieb nach eigenen Angaben seit 1918 eine Kunsthandlung in München.[10] Im Jahre 1921 heiratete sie den türkischen Staatsbürger Ali Almàs-Diamant und trat zum Judentum über. Seit 1926 lebten sie jedoch in Trennung, 1937 erfolgte die Scheidung. Der Name „Almas" blieb jedoch für die Galerie erhalten
Nach eigenen Angaben lernte Almas-Dietrich im Jahre 1936 Heinrich Hoffmann (1885–1957), den Fotografen Adolf Hitlers, kennen und erhielt über diesen erste Aufträge, Kunst für Hitler zu erwerben. Fortan entwickelte sie sich zu den aktivsten Vermittlern von Kunst an die Nationalsozialisten. Zwischen 1936 und 1944 verkaufte Almas-Dietrich über eintausend Kunstwerke an Hitler und zählt damit zu den Kunsthändlern mit der größten Anzahl an Hitler verkauften Kunstwerken
Auch der privilegierte Münchner Kunsthandel bediente sich in Wien. Die Händlerin Maria Almas Dietrich war nicht die einzige, die sich darauf verstand, Druck auf die fluchtbereiten jüdischen Sammler auszuüben, um dann die abgepressten Bilder zu weitaus höheren Preisen an Bormann weiterzuverkaufen.
One set of reports are called Detailed Intelligence Reports (DIR). This series consists of reports dealing with the activities of various agents employed by Hitler, Göring and Rosenberg to acquire artworks for them in Axis-occupied countries. DIR No. 8 on Kajetan Muehlmann was not issued. DIR No.14 on the activities of Maria Dietrich was planned. It was not issued, but a full accounting of her activities was incorporated into Consolidated Interrogation Report No. 4.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty |url=
(help)D'après une note rédigée le 8 septembre 1999, par le conservateur général chargé du département des Sculptures, se fondant sur le dossier Almas-Dietrich (1), en 1950/1951, Mimi Tho Rahde, fille (naturelle ?) et héritière de Maria Almas-Dietrich, a revendiqué le groupe comme ayant été récupéré à tort par la France ; selon la demanderesse, l'oeuvre n'avait pas été spoliée mais achetée régulièrement par sa mère lors d'une vente à Berlin ; elle fournissait à l'appui de cette démarche une attestation de Gustav Rochlitz, du 12 avril 1950, précisant que deux caisses appartenant à Madame Dietrich (ou à Mimi Tho Rahde ?) avaient été séquestrées à Füssen avec les caisses appartenant à lui-même. D'autre part, Alois Lang, le 15 novembre 1949, atteste "sous serment" que les deux caisses lui avaient été confiées par Madame Dietrich (ou Mimi Tho Rahde ?), avec celles de Gustav Rochlitz. Par ailleurs, ce dernier atteste que la sculpture avait été mise en vente par lui chez Hans W. Lange, à Berlin, en 1941 ou 1942, et qu'elle avait été achetée par Maria Almas-Dietrich (ou Mimi Tho Rahde ?).
"The Rape of Europa," positions Lohse as one of several agents working for the SS in Paris who controlled "exchanges" of modernist art (which the Nazis called degenerate) for their more prized old masters. "Göring's Man in Paris" sets him as one of the primary planets orbiting Göring, in a solar system that included Nazi art traders such as Alois Miedl, Walter Andreas Hofer, Maria Almas Dietrich and Karl Haberstock.
[[Category:1971 deaths]] [[Category:1892 births]] [[Category:Nazis]] [[Category:Art dealers]]