In 2002, two of Jennewein's semi-nude figures in the
Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building in
Washington, D.C., were hidden behind a curtain. This has been linked to the exposed
breast on the female figure,
Spirit of Justice (the male counterpart is
Majesty of Law). The curtain was removed in 2005. Several posthumous profiles of Jennewein have brought attention to his participation in the Great German Art Exhibitions (
Große Deutsche Kunstausstellung) in
Munich in 1937, 1938, and 1939. The shows were held annually in the House of German Art (
Haus der Deustchen Kunst) from 1937-1944 with direct oversight from Adolf Hitler. According to Head of Archive at Haus Der Kunst Sabine Brantl, which succeeded the Haus der Deutschen Kunst after the fall of the
Nazi Germany, the exhibitions "established an aesthetic and political space that served to implement and display" the ideological goals of
Nazism, including the construction of an
Aryan supremacist racial hierarchy. Artists exhibiting at the House of German Art were required to be members of the
Reich Chamber of Fine Arts (Reichskulturkammer), which in turn could only be attained by submitting proof of
"Aryan descent". However, it is not known whether Jennewein was a member; he may have been granted an exception to the requirement. In 1938 he was selected in Munich to a group of 25 preferred artist who were allowed to display yearly more than 5 artworks at the Great German Art Exhibitions. His displayed works, photographed by
Heinrich Hoffmann (photographer), were printed on postcards issued by the House of German Art. Several works by Jennewein, identical to his bronzes displayed in the Third Reich, are currently displayed by American institutions, including Yale University and the Metropolitan. In 1938 Jennewein sold three bronzes to Adolf Hitler: 'Tänzerin' ('Greek Dance'), 'Rast' (Resting') and 'Komödie' ('Comedy') for 600, 370, respectively 380 Reichsmark. After the war the US government apparently paid him almost 30,000 dollars compensation for the destruction of his art works bombed in Munich by Allied bombers. ==Recognition==