PARIS (AP) — The painting shows a girl in a bonnet and her younger brother staring across the Normandy coast toward an unknown horizon.
The artwork itself faced an unknown future in 1942, when it was acquired in Paris for Adolf Hitler, one of countless works swept up in the Nazi plunder of European Jews.
On Tuesday, it went on permanent display in a new room at the city’s Musée d’Orsay as part of France’s long-delayed reckoning with Nazi-era looting. The gallery is the first in the museum’s history given over to the orphaned masterpieces of the Nazi era.
It is also the first such display in France where the paintings are hung so visitors can read the backs. The stamps, labels and inventory marks map how each piece of art moved from private homes into Nazi hands.
The painting by Belgian artist Alfred Stevens was originally earmarked for the Führer’s planned museum in Linz, Austria. But by 1943, it was reassigned to Hitler’s mountain home in the Bavaria region of Germany. The museum was never built following Germany’s defeat.
Allied recovery teams — the Monuments Men made famous by the 2014 George Clooney film — finally found the painting after the war.
No heir came forward, and no one knows who owned it before 1942.
A collection of unclaimed art
The 1891 Stevens painting is not unique. It is one of 2,200 such artistic orphans in France — known as MNR, short for Musées Nationaux Récupération, or National Museums Recovery. These artworks were retrieved from Germany and Austria after 1945 and entrusted to French national museums in the early 1950s.
They were never claimed. The state does not own them but holds them in trust for heirs who may yet appear. The Musée d’Orsay holds 225 such pieces.
Marie Duboisse, a retired schoolteacher from Lyon, paused Tuesday in front of the Stevens painting.
“I have seen those three letters — M, N, R — at the Louvre. I never knew what they meant. I thought it was a donor,” she said.
Last month, the museum launched its first research unit dedicated to tracing the orphans’ rightful heirs, file by file. The effort involves six Franco-German researchers led by Ines Rotermund-Reynard, the Orsay’s head of provenance research.
The new gallery displays 13 such works.
France’s long-delayed reckoning
France is reckoning, in plain sight, with one of the longest silences in its postwar memory: the looted, sold and lost art of the Nazi era — and the French hands that helped move it.
Starting in the late 1960s, documentaries and historians began naming what France had done under the Vichy government that cooperated with the Nazis, including helping to send 80,000 Jews from France to their deaths and presiding over a Paris art market that grew rich on the property of the dead.
In July 1995, President Jacques Chirac stood at the site of the Vél d’Hiv roundup — the 1942 mass arrest in Paris of Jews who were then deported to Nazi camps — and said, for the first time, that the French state itself bore responsibility. In 1997, France launched a national inquiry into the plundering of artwork from Jews.
About 100,000 cultural objects were declared looted from France during the war. Some 60,000 were recovered. About 45,000 went home.
Roughly 15,000 had no identified owner. The 2,200 MNR artworks were chosen from that remainder.
For four decades, they were largely a dormant file. Between 1954 and 1993, France returned only four.
Chirac’s mea culpa, and the country’s slow reckoning with its own role, changed that.
The Orsay has returned 15 since 1994.
The market that fed the plunder
The most recent pieces of art to be returned — by Alfred Sisley and Auguste Renoir, given to the heirs of Grégoire Schusterman — went home in 2024.
Inside the new gallery, the histories hang on the wall.
There is a piece by Edgar Degas, a copy he made of a Berlin ballroom scene around 1879. The Jewish collector Fernand Ochsé bought it in 1919. Ochsé was deported to Auschwitz and killed.
There is another Renoir, a portrait of the writer Alphonse Daudet’s wife, sold to a Cologne museum in November 1941. No record names the seller.
There is also a painting by Paul Cézanne that was dismissed as a fake by a Louvre curator in the 1950s. Recent study suggests it may be real.
Daniel Lévy, a software engineer visiting from Strasbourg, stood at the Cézanne, looking at its back.
“You walk past these labels your whole life and you do not read them. Now I will read them,” he said. “My grandmother lost some of her family in the camps. Some of these paintings were probably hanging in homes like hers.”
Paris was Western Europe’s richest art hub in the early 20th century.
The Hôtel Drouot, the city’s main auction house, reopened in autumn 1940 and ran briskly through the Nazi occupation.
French dealers were among the conduits. German museums sent buyers, and Hitler’s agents took the best.
“The most important art market in Europe was concentrated in Paris,” Rotermund-Reynard said. “The moment the Nazis arrived in occupied territory, they had enormous buying power. They threw themselves at the market.”
Germans were eager buyers
Almost every museum in Nazi Germany, Rotermund-Reynard said, sent buyers to Paris to expand its collections. Those buyers drew on a market thick with looted and forced-sale property.
“Hitler himself wanted to build the world’s largest museum, in Linz, the city in Austria where he grew up,” she said.
Hermann Göring, Hitler’s deputy, traveled 21 times to Paris during the occupation to help himself to works taken from Jewish collectors.
“There was an enormous thirst,” Rotermund-Reynard said, “both for the possessions of Jewish collectors, and for acquisitions to expand the German museums.”
For Rotermund-Reynard, the works cannot be separated from the genocide.
“All of this is part of the history of the Shoah,” she said, using the Hebrew word for the Holocaust. “When you try to understand this drive to take from Jewish families, it is part of the terrifying Nazi ideology to erase Jewish life.”
Antisemitic acts in France — home to Europe’s largest Jewish community — hit 1,320 in 2025, according to the French Interior Ministry. Those near-record levels followed a sharp surge after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel.
The gallery was not built to fight antisemitism, said François Blanchetière, the Orsay’s chief sculpture curator and co-curator of the gallery. But the consequences of the Holocaust must be repaired, he said.
“There is no statute of limitations on these crimes,” he said.
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A previous version of this story had the wrong first name for Degas.
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