Professor Gregory Maertz Awarded Fellowships by the National Humanities Center and the American Council of Learned Societies

July 01, 2008

Gregory Maertz, Ph.D., Professor in the Department of English in St. John’s College of Arts and Sciences, was awarded a fellowship from National Humanities Center (NHC) for the academic year 2008-9.  Dr. Maertz, whose proposal was entitled “House of Art: Cultural History of Nazi Germany,” was one of 42 leading scholars from across the nation selected from more than 400 applicants for this honor. 

Since 1978, the National Humanities Center has devoted its energy and ethos to advanced studies in the humanities.  The Center awards more than $1.6 million in fellowship grants to enable scholars to pursue their research. To date, this endeavor has resulted in the publication of more than 1,000 books in all fields of the humanities.

Maertz was also awarded a fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies for the same project.  The two fellowships combined with support from St. John’s Provost Julia Upton, RSM, Ph.D., will allow him to devote 2008-2010 to this landmark research.

The research and writing Maertz will conduct over the next two years will form the basis for two forthcoming books, The Invisible Museum: Unearthing the Lost Modernist Art of the Third Reich and House of Art: A Cultural History of Nazi Germany, both of which will be published by Yale University Press.

“These two books will radically alter our understanding of officially sanctioned art—its production, patronage, and exhibition history—and offer the missing evidence needed to support the work of scholars who are rethinking how Modernism and modernity relate to Nazi art, architecture, film, and design,” said Maertz.

Maertz was the first scholar permitted to enter and photograph the previously sealed archives of the former House of German Art museum, where he uncovered Adolf Hitler's art purchases from 1939-44, the identity of the 15,000 artists who submitted work for the Great German Art Exhibitions, the correspondence of the post-war Processing and Settlement Office to artists, and purchase records of Nazi-era exhibitions.

After discovering 10,000 Nazi-era paintings that were confiscated by the US Army in 1946 and then returned to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1951 and 1986, Maertz received permission from Chris Dercon, Director of the House of German Art, to photograph its archives’ contents. 

Opened in 1937, the House of Art was the first building commissioned by Adolf Hitler after he came to power in 1933. Its purpose was to showcase the finest and most acceptable art according to National Socialist aesthetics. “Degenerate Artists,” such as Matisse, van Gogh, Paul Klee, and Franz Marc were banned that same year.

 “Art was central to the Nazi political and cultural agenda,” explains Maertz. “They saw how culture could be manipulated to serve different political functions.”

After Hitler was defeated, much of the Nazi-supported artwork was believed to be lost, destroyed, or confiscated by the United States military. However, in 2002, Maertz discovered nearly 10,000 works of art which had never been seen before. A vast amount of documentation related to these works of art remained locked in the archives of the House of German Art until Maertz’s discovery.

“I didn’t anticipate the richness of the material I found in the House of Art archives. The master narrative of twentieth-century art history insists that Nazi art was in binary opposition to classical modernism. My research reveals this assumption to be overly simplistic. Nazi art was not as monolithically neo-classical or anti-Modernist as Nazi propaganda would have us believe,” Maertz comments.

Dercon has been restoring the House of German Art to the original architecture designed by the Nazis because he believes that the past and history must be learned and remembered despite its gravity.  In an April 13, 2008 New York Times article, “Munich Redux: Germany’s Hot Spot of the Moment,” Dercon was quoted as saying, “We’re constantly working with the meaning of the building and the past of the building.”

Because Maertz’s objectives to uncover art commissioned by the Third Reich coincide with Dercon’s goals, he was permitted to be the first to enter the archives and to publish all that he found there.