Hitler's taste in art embraced the epic stature of the male model of antiquity.
Hitler's rejection - in his eyes, humiliation - by the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna would now be "repaid" in many ways.
closer look at Hitler as an artist of the great war.



German Art-true art-was "of the people" and expressed the moral values of the Third Reich. It was easy to comprehend, often depicting scenes of everyday life or landscapes. Artistic renderings of the human form, following the classical models of ancient Greece, further embodied Hitler concept of the eternal value of beauty. His favorite sculptors, Josef Thorak and Arno Breker, created dramatic over sized pieces portraying semi-clad male and female figures in poses that idealized youth, strength, heroism, and sacrifice.The "degenerate" artworks included in the exhibition had come
from the most unlikely of places: museums throughout Germany.
In 1937 Goebbels had organized a committee which was ordered
to seize such artwork from the State Museums. More than 16,000
works of modern art - including masterpieces of the highest quality-
were removed from these institutions' walls and stored in Berlin.
Selections of the most "disgusting" works were readied for
inclusion in the "Degenerate Art" Exhibition.



During the course of World War II, Hitler and the Nazis planned and executed thefts of an unprecendented magnitude. While Hitler's focus remained on stealing the greatest artwork of Western European civilization, the Nazi machinery organized and implemented theft of almost every item imaginable: from paintings sculpture, porcelain, furniture, rugs and tapestries, to gold, diamonds, currency, and jewelry, plus stained glass, church bells entire libraries and wine. Early success was intoxicating and, in time, everything seemed obtainable. For the Fuhrer, no desired object was too large or important to steal, especially when it provided an opportunity to correct the wrongs of history and humiliate those responsible.