Finding Art The Nazis Stole Author followed a trail of looted art through Switzerland and around the world. HARRY KIRSBAUM Staff'Writer E arly in the investigation, Hector Feliciano found himself facing two lawyers in a small back room of a French state museum. Feliciano, then a Paris-based writer for the Washington Post, was curious about a group of paintings in the muse- um that he suspected had been looted by the Germans in World War II and unclaimed by the rightful owners. Harry Kirsbaum can be reached at (248) 354-6060 ext 244, or by e-mail at: hkirsbaum@thejewishnews.com . 29 99 10 Detroit Jewish News was piqued when someone told him, The museum staff said they were too matter-of-factly, that many paintings busy to help him and referred him to the from private art collections confiscated lawyers. As he asked them questions — by the Nazis were still missing. rather innocuous ones, I thought" — he Trying to understand what he said heard the lawyers replying exactly as the was a fact commonly known in the staff had and he noticed them glancing European art nervously and fearfully at Above: just a small sample of the art looted by the world sent him on a each other. Nazis during World War II. Stolen art included seven-year "I thought works by Edgar Degas, Henri Matisse and Pierre journey into `What s going Auguste Renoir among countless others. the dusty on here? What back rooms of are these guys museums and galleries on two conti- hiding?'" he said in an interview here nents. The search for truth caused him last week. "That's when I decided I to quit his job and nearly bankrupted was onto something." him. But it also produced a book, The While Feliciano was covering the art Lost Museum, that exposed the way world for the Post in 1989, his interest " looted art was smuggled through Switzerland and sold acrossthe globe. Feliciano, in town for a Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit din- ner, concentrated on several large collec- tions for his book — among them the Rothschild, Schloss, Rosenberg and Bernheim-Jeunem collections — to show how and why they were looted. "The subject is so enormous I did not want to make a directory," he said. About 100,000 works of art from 203 private art collections were looted in France from Jews, freemasons and polit- ical opponents during the war, he said. He learned that the families had stopped looking for their lost art many years ago, and no one had ever N