The Parisian museum Jeu de Paume was used to warehouse artworks seized from French Jews. Göring visited it about twenty times between 1941 and 1944, to select artworks of especially high quality that had been picked out especially for him. In addition to about 700 works of art that Göring grabbed from the Nazi looting organisation, the
Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, Göring also deployed his own organization, the
Devisenschutzkommando, in the occupied territories to confiscate art on his behalf. From 1937 onwards, Göring received assistance from the
art dealer Walter Andreas Hofer in compiling his art collection. From 1939 to 1944 Hofer acted as director of the Göring Collection. After the war, Hofer was sentenced in absentia to 10 years in prison by a military court. This sentence was never executed and Hofer was able to continue his art trade in
Munich undisturbed. As early as July 1940, Göring turned up in Amsterdam and showed an interest in the art holdings of Dutch dealer
Jacques Goudstikker, who had died while fleeing the German invasion. Göring had Goudstikker employee Arie Ten Broek illegally appointed agent of the Goudstikker company. Then on 13 July 1940, Ten Broek sold to Göring all the art held by the company as of 26 June. Göring bought all 1,113 of the inventoried paintings and artifacts for NLG 2,000,000 (value 2005: €13,750,000), no more than one-sixth of their actual value (a transaction that resembles an imitation). The sale to Göring also included 'three ceiling pieces' by
Gerard de Lairesse, mounted on the ceiling of a room in the Goudstikkers gallery at 458 Herengracht. The panels were detached from the ceiling and transported to Berlin, as were the more than 780 paintings that were immediately taken by Göring himself. == Monuments Men and the Göring Collection ==