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Showing posts with label Mona Lisa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mona Lisa. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 November 2013

ARCA Founder Noah Charney Publishes in The Guardian on the Question: "Did the Nazis steal the Mona Lisa?"

Posted on 22:20 by Unknown
This is the photograph by Jean-Pierre-Muller Javier
Sorrian/AFP/Getty Images of the Louvre's Mona Lisa
 and the copy housed at Madrid's Prado Museum. guardian  
Here's a link to an article in today's Guardian, Did the Nazis steal the Mona Lisa?, written by Noah Charney, founder of ARCA. The article was adapted from Charney's book, The Thefts of the Mona Lisa: On Stealing the World's Most Famous Painting.
With the recent discovery in Munich of €1bn (£860m) worth of art looted by the Nazis, and the forthcoming release of a feature film, starring George Clooney, based on the exploits of the Monuments Men, it is a fitting time to recall how fortunate we are that so much art survived thesecond world war. The Nazi art theft division, the ERR (Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg), was responsible for the theft of around 5m works: from the Louvre, the Uffizi and countless churches, galleries and homes. From headline-grabbing works like Michelangelo's Bruges Madonna to the most frequently stolen artwork in history, Jan van Eyck's Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, both of which feature in the Clooney film, to lesser-known gems that nevertheless held a place in the hearts of museumgoers or families, the story of art looting during the second world war is a tree with countless roots. Each masterpiece has its own history, a provenance ripe with intrigue. Few of the individual stories have been told, fewer still in depth.
Among the many enduring mysteries of this periodis the fate of the world's most famous painting. It seems that Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa was among the paintings found in the Altaussee salt mine in the Austrian alps, which was converted by the Nazis into their secret stolen-art warehouse. 
The painting only "seems" to have been found there because contradictory information has come down through history, and the Mona Lisa is not mentioned in any wartime document, Nazi or allied, as having been in the mine. Whether it may have been at Altaussee was a question only raised when scholars examined the postwar Special Operations Executive report on the activities of Austrian double agents working for the allies to secure the mine. This report states that the team "saved such priceless objects as the Louvre's Mona Lisa". A second document, from an Austrian museum near Altaussee dated 12 December 1945, states that "the Mona Lisa from Paris" was among "80 wagons of art and cultural objects from across Europe" taken into the mine.
You may read the rest of the article here.
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Posted in Mona Lisa, Nazi art theft, Noah Charney | No comments

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Film director Medeiros on whether or not Vincenzo Peruggia hid in the closet before he stole the Mona Lisa in 1911

Posted on 16:11 by Unknown
by Catherine Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor-in-Chief

Did Vincenzo Peruggia just walk into the Louvre on a Monday morning and steal the Mona Lisa or did he hide overnight in the Paris museum? Was Peruggia an employee of the Louvre at the time of the theft? Did he pick Leonardo da Vinci's painting because it was small and portable (the easiest to take of the Italian works on display in the Salon Carré? I asked these questions to Joe Medeiros, writer and director of "The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story".
Actually, Peruggia wasn't working at the Louvre when he stole the painting.  He had finished putting the artwork behind glass in January.  But Gobier, the company he worked for, continued to work there repairing the glass roof of the museum.  Peruggia had left Gobier in July during a strike and had gone to work with another company. I do think he stole it for the size, but also -- possibly --because it was a Leonardo. According to his testimony -- and the police didn't dispute it -- he entered that morning and didn't hide overnight.  No reason to.  Security was very lax.
Here is a link to the documentary's blog where Mr. Medeiros posts all the screenings.

If you're in San Diego tonight, you might be able to catch the show!
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Posted in Joe Medeiros, Mona Lisa | No comments

Sunday, 13 October 2013

"The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story" documents an art crime and a writer's obsession to understand motive

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
Joe and Justine Medeiros in Hollywood
 at the Arclight Documentary Festival
by Catherine Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor-in-Chief

“The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story”, winner of the award for Best Historical Documentary in the San Antonio Film Festival, provides clarity on how and why an immigrant housepainter, Vincenzo Peruggia, stole Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” from the Louvre in 1911.

Written and directed by Joe Medeiros and produced by his wife Justine, this documentary of a Parisian art theft tells the story of one writer’s obsession that lead him to a Northern Italian village to meet the art thief’s only living offspring, 84-year-old Celestina. Joe Medeiros hoped that Peruggia’s daughter could explain why her father, an immigrant painter living in Paris, had stolen the da Vinci masterpiece from the Salon Carré and hidden it for two years. Was Peruggia a patriot who believed he was returning a masterpiece Napoleon had stolen from Italy? Or was he an ordinary criminal looking to make a fortune? Unfortunately, Celestina did not remember her father who had died of a heart attack in Paris before she was two years old. Not until the age of 20 did Celestina learn from her aunt that her father had stolen the Mona Lisa. After promising to find out what motivated Celestina's father to steal da Vinci's masterpiece, Joe and Justine Medeiros visited the Louvre and archives in Paris with Peruggia’s grandson before traveling with Peruggia's granddaughter to the hotel where the painting was recovered in Florence in 1913.

“The Missing Piece” documents the efforts to research, translate and retrace a century old art crime. Art crime specialists such as Charles Hill, Scotland Yard Art Squad (retired), and Robert Wittman, FBI Art Crime Team (retired), appear with Louvre curators and other writers on the Mona Lisa theft (Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler, The Crimes of Paris). Medeiros draws conclusions from primary sources to explain how Peruggia stole the painting and got it out of his museum and to his apartment (apparently he used both a bus and a horse carriage); where he stored the painting for two years; how the French police investigated the crime and how close the great detective  came to identifying both the thief and the painting’s hiding place; and finally, the “missing piece” which leads conclusively to the motive for the theft. The story includes Peruggia’s bouts with lead poisoning, the truth about the psychological evaluation used in his trial, and how Peruggia returned to France after his imprisonment during World War I. The film ends with Joe Medeiros revealing the truth to Celestina, turning the story from art crime to that of family.

"It's not a big, budget Hollywood movie, but it does tell a good story that has a beginning, middle and, fortunately, a happy ending," Joe Medeiros said.

The movie's website and blog contains more information.

Tanya Lervik (ARCA 2011) reviewed this movie last year at a screening in Washington, D.C.
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Posted in art theft, Joe Medeiros, Mona Lisa, movies, Stolen Art Recovered, the missing piece | No comments

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Showtimes for Joe Medeiros' documentary about the life and motivations of Vincenzo Peruggia's theft of the Mona Lisa

Posted on 13:50 by Unknown
In July 2012, Tanya Levrik reviewed Joe Medeiros' documentary The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story about the life and motivations of Vincenzo Peruggia who stole Leonardo da Vinci's "La Joconde" from the Louvre in 1911. This film is still being seen in festivals across the country:

 thru Thursday, Sept. 26
4:10 pm
The Screen, Santa Fe, NM

Thursday, Sept. 26 - 7:30 pm
Cleveland Italian Film Festival
Atlas Cinema Eastgate, Cleveland, OH

Tuesday, Oct 1 thru Saturday, Oct. 5 - 6:15 pm
The Guild Cinema, Albuquerque, NM

Thursday, Oct. 3 thru Saturday, Oct. 5
South Texas Underground Film Festival
Corpus Christi, TX

Friday, Oct. 4 1:00 pm & 8:00 pm
Saturday, Oct. 5 - 8:00 pm
Auburn Public Theater, Auburn, NY

Friday, October 11 - 3:30 pm
ArcLight Documentary Film Festival, Hollywood, CA

Friday, Oct. 11 - 7:00 pm
Sunday, Oct. 13 - 1:30 pm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Sunday, Oct. 13 - 3:00 pm & 5:00 pm
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX

Thursday, Oct. 15
Friday, Oct. 16
The Media Arts Center, San Diego, CA

Sunday, Oct. 20 - 2:00 pm
Sacramento Italian Cultural Society, 
Sacramento, CA

Wednesday, Nov. 20 - 7:00 pm
Hiway Theater, Jenkintown, PA
Live Q&A with filmmakers

Sunday, November 24 - 4:30 pm
The Colonial Theater, Phoenixville, PA
Live Q&A with filmmakers

Thursday, Dec. 5 - 7:30 pm
Ambler Theater, Ambler, PA
Skype Q & A withfilmmakers

Tuesday, Dec. 20 - 8:00 pm
Batelle Film Club, Richland, WA
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Posted in documentary, Joe Medeiros, Mona Lisa, Vincenzo Peruggia | No comments

Sunday, 12 May 2013

The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her thief, The True Story Headed to Denver Art Museum this Friday and to the Biografilm Festival in Bologna in June

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story, the documentary about the 1911 theft of Leonardo da Vinci's now famous portrait of Lisa Gherardini del Giocondo from the Louvre, premiered in Los Angeles at the Beverly Hills Film Festival on Saturday, May 11.

"We were thrilled to have The Missing Piece screen at Grauman's Chinese Theater for the Beverly Hills Film Festival," Director Joe Medeiros wrote to the ARCA Blog. "We had a very enthusiastic sold-out crowd.  It was our 9th festival and one of the best so far."

Medeiros bills the film as "the true story of how and why Vincenzo Peruggia, a simple Italian immigrant, stole the Mona Lisa and nearly got away with it".

The film will screen at the Denver Art Museum at 7 p.m. this Friday (May 17):
Come to a riveting and humorous documentary film about Vincent Peruggia, the man who stole the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in 1911, his 84-year-old daughter who thought he did it for patriotic reasons, and the filmmaker who spent more than 30 years trying to find the truth.  Written and produced by Joe Medeiros, former head writer for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, this documentary combines historical photographs, animation and interviews with Peruggia’s descendants to examine how an unassuming housepainter from Italy pulled off “the greatest little-known heist in modern time.”  The producers will be present for Q&A after the film.
The international premiere of the movie will be at the Biografilm Festival in Bologna on Saturday June 15 and Sunday June 16.

Joe Medeiros, writer/director, and
Justine Medeiros, producer. 
ARCA Alum ('11) Tanya Lervik saw the movie last July in Georgetown and reviewed the movie here.

Last October Joe Medeiros weighed in on the Isleworth Mona Lisa, positioning that the painting had not been newly discovered but around for almost a century (see the ARCA blog post here).

This documentary is available for private screenings. Here are the project's links:

www.monalisamissing.com
https://www.facebook.com/MonaLisaMissing
Twitter@monalisastolen

Updated May 15 to include information from the director Joe Medeiros.
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Posted in documentary, Mona Lisa, stolen art, Stolen Art Recovered, the missing piece | No comments

Thursday, 27 December 2012

ARCA Founder Noah Charney at TEDxCelje Speaks on Art Theft at the Louvre

Posted on 07:13 by Unknown
Writer and art historian Noah Charney's TED talk given at a TEDx event in November is now online.  The talk is about art theft and the Mona Lisa and is entitled "How To Steal from the Louvre".


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Posted in 1911, ARCA, art theft, louvre, Mona Lisa, Noah Charney | No comments

Friday, 5 October 2012

Intriguing Headlines Tout Second Mona Lisa But What Do the Experts Opine?

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
Isleworth Mona Lisa (Wiki)
'La Joconde' (1503-1506) has mostly hung in the Louvre (INV. 779) since Francois I acquired it in 1518.  Last week The Mona Lisa Foundation reintroduced the 'Isleworth Mona Lisa' which had not been seen in public for more than 40 years and declared that it was an earlier unfinished portrait of Lisa Gherardini del Giocondo by da Vinci.

Jamie Keaton for the Associated Press (published online here in Business Week) reported on the unveiling of the Isleworth Mona Lisa in Geneva on September 28.  Keaton points out the Alessandro Vezzosi (see below) 'declined to line up behind the foundation's claim that it was truly a "Mona Lisa" predecessor painted by da Vinci.  Here, on the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci's website, Professor Vezzosi clarifies that research on  the "Isleworth Mona Lisa" will continue.

The Mona Lisa Foundation, a non-profit organization based in Zurich, has on its website a 22-minute video that walks the viewer through its claim, using historical documentation (including writings of 16th century art historian Giorgio Vasari), connoisseurship, critical comparisons and physical and scientific examinations.  Participants in the video include Professor Alessandro Vezzosi, Director of the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci; Professor John F. Asmus, Research Physicist at the University of California in San Diego; Stanley B. Feldman, and art historian and principal author of "Mona Lisa - Leonardo's Earlier Version".  The video asks if it is possible that there was another Mona Lisa and if so, what could have happened to it? It is claimed that Giorgio Vasari and Agostino Vespucci mention a painting left unfinished.  In the early 20th century, Hugh Blaker, curator of The Holburne Museum  in Bath, believed in the two Mona Lisa painting theory and spent a decade looking for the unfinished version until he found it "in the Somerset home of an English nobleman" "who's family had owned the painting for nearly 150 years."  Blaker brought it to his London studio in Isleworth, then shipped it to the United States where it hung in the private offices of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, according to the video.  Then in 1922, Blaker sent the Isleworth Mona Lisa to Italy for the opinion of experts there.  In 1926, Baker's stepfather, John Eyre, published "The Two Mona Lisas."  Henry F. Pulitzer, over a period of 26 years, liquidated his Kensington estate and part of his art collection to purchase the Isleworth Mona Lisa.  In 1979, after Pulitzer's death, the painting was locked up in a Swiss Bank vault "where it would remain for more than four decades."  "Can science at least succeed where connoisseurship has failed [in establishing the painting's authenticity]?" In 2004, the Isleworth Mona Lisa was removed from its security vault and "entrusted to world renowned art auctioneer David Feldman" (Vice President of the Mona Lisa Foundation).  "Over the next 12 years, the painting went through every test" including examination by Professor Asmus who has also examined the Louvre Mona Lisa who saying "Leonardo's hand" is evident in some aspects of the Isleworth Mona Lisa.

In ABC New's "Second Mona Lisa Unveiled for First Time in 40 Years", Mathew Rosenbaum quotes Martin Kemp, Oxford University professor and da Vinci expert, as proclaiming the Isleworth Mona Lisa a "well-made early copy".  [Professor Kemp outlines his opinion in more detail on his blog here where he refutes the 'evidence' of a second Mona Lisa and identifies the poor qualities of the painting: "Everything points to the Isleworth painting being a copy.  There is a comparable copy -- island and all -- in the National Museum in Oslo."]

On ABC's Good Morning America and World News segment, Alexander Nagel, Professor of Fine Arts for NYU, says that the Isleworth Mona Lisa is "suspect" as it is painted on canvas and Leonardo painted on wood.

"A Second Mona Lisa? We've known about it for 100 Years" is the headline for the blog post by Joe Medeiros, director of the documentary, "The Missing Piece: Vincenzo Peruggia and the Unthinkable Theft of the Mona Lisa".  This painting is nothing new, according to Medeiros and reprints the article from The New York Times on February 5, 1914: Another Mona Lisa Found in London? Expert Accepts It as a Version Painted by Leonardo "In No Sense A Copy".  According to this article, a version of the Mona Lisa painting turned up in the possession of a Mr. Eyre, an author and novelist living in Isleworth.  P. G. Konody, a Special Correspondence for The New York Times, writes that the Isleworth Mona Lisa is 'of such superb quality that it more than holds its own when compared to the much restored and repainted Louvre masterpiece':
But there are more potent reasons to attach the greatest importance to the new discovery.  There is, in the collection of old master drawings at the Louvre an original pen drawing by Raphael, which is reproduced in Muntz's great work on Leonardo, and which is generally admitted to be a memory sketch by Raphael of Leonardo's "Mona Lisa."  Now this memory sketch is framed at both sides by two columns of which no trace is to be found in the Paris "Mona Lisa." These columns appear in the identical place in the Isleworth picture and are of immense value to the harmonious balance of the composition. 
In the notice sent out to the press it is stated that these columns are mentioned by Vasari, which is as little in accordance with facts as most of the other statements made.  Thus, one of the points quoted in favor of the authenticity of the picture is one of Leonardo's letters to Marshal de Chaumont.  In this letter occurs the passage: "E portar con mecho due quadri di due Notro Donne di varie grandezze le qual son fatte pel cristianissimo notro re."  While most art historians have misread this to mean that Leonardo took with him "two pictures of Our Lady, of different sizes," the writer of the widely circulated notice says that the existence of two versions of the "Mona Lisa" is proved by Leonardo himself referring to two portraits.  A literal translation of the quoted passage would however run as follows: "And take with me two portraits of two of our ladies, of different sizes, which have been painted for our most Christian King", the letter thus reflecting clearly to two different ladies and not to two versions of the same. 
However, no specious arguments are needed for the Isleworth picture, the quality of which may speak for itself.  And a close investigation of the picture leaves the firm conviction that, though not altogether from the hand of Leonardo da Vinci himself, it emanates most certainly from his studio and was very largely worked up by the master himself.  The hands, with their careful and somewhat hard drawing and terra cotta coloring, suggest at once the name of Leonardo's pupil, Marco d'Oggionno, whereas the inimitably soft and lovely painting of the head and bust, the exquisite subtlety of the expression, the golden glow of the general coloring, can be due only to Leonardo.  The face shows none of the defects of the Louvre picture, which are probably due to clumsy repainting. 
The present owner of the picture acquired his treasure only about a year ago.  He found it hidden in a Somerset mansion where it had been for a century and a half, and whither it had been brought from Italy.
It's an intriguing subject involving a genius and a famous painting that grabbed headlines a century ago and continues to this day.

Written by Catherine Schofield Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor-in-Chief
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Posted in copies, Martin Kemp, Mona Lisa, Mona Lisa Foundation | No comments

Monday, 30 July 2012

One to watch: “The Missing Piece” The Truth About the Man Who Stole the Mona Lisa

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
by Tanya K. Lervik (ARCA 2011)

On Sunday, July 29th, a private screening of “The Missing Piece” was held in a Georgetown theater for about 100 invitees in Washington, D.C. For some 30 years, filmmaker Joe Medeiros has been captivated by the challenge to clarify the true motivations behind Vincenzo Peruggia’s 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre museum in Paris. In this charming documentary, he shares his journey of discovery with the joyful wit and irreverence which served him well as head writer for The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

Medeiros’s years of research began to coalesce when he discovered that Peruggia’s daughter was still living. He travelled to Italy to interview Celestina Peruggia while simultaneously arranging access to numerous experts and an important trove of primary resources. Of particular interest are letters Peruggia wrote home to his family and the notes from his psychological evaluation after the theft.

The final conclusions reached may not prove surprising to those familiar with the case. However, Medeiros convincingly debunks alternative theories, for example, that a conman mastermind named Eduardo de Valfierno had commissioned the theft in order to make copies to sell to unscrupulous buyers, or that it was really Peruggia’s friend Lancellotti who had committed the theft and hidden the painting. Above all, the film humanizes Vincenzo Peruggia, a man who had become an obscure figure even within his own remaining family. It’s a fascinating look at one of the most infamous art crimes and an engaging account of Medeiros’s personal quest for answers.

The film has recently been entered into numerous film festivals worldwide, the rules of which prohibit the sale of DVDs or public release until after the festival season ends. However, this is definitely a project to watch. Updates are forthcoming on Facebook, Twitter and the project website (http://monalisamissing.com/welcome.html).
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Posted in Eduardo de Valfierno, Joe Medeiros, Mona Lisa, the missing piece | No comments
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  • customs
  • Dallas Museum of Art
  • Dan Brown
  • Daniel Silva
  • Danny Boyle
  • Daubert
  • Daumier Register
  • david gill
  • David Turner
  • De Spiegel
  • deaccession
  • deadbolt
  • Degas
  • DePaul
  • Derek Fincham
  • destroying stolen art
  • destruction
  • Detroit Institute of Arts
  • Deutsche Welle
  • Dick Drent
  • Dick Ellis
  • Diego Rivera
  • dinosaurs
  • DIOCT
  • Diplomacy
  • Dirk Hannema
  • disaster relief
  • disputed art
  • documentary
  • Don Hrycyk
  • Donn Zaretsky
  • Donna Tartt
  • Dorit Straus
  • Dulwich Picture Gallery
  • Duncan Chappell
  • Dutch
  • Dutch Art Crime Team
  • Dutch Police
  • Easter
  • economy
  • Edinburgh
  • Edirne
  • Edmund de Waal
  • Eduardo de Valfierno
  • Education
  • Edvard Munch
  • Edward Forbes Smiley
  • Egon Schiele
  • Egypt
  • Eleanor and Anthony Vallombroso Award for Art Crime Scholarship
  • Elizabeth Royer
  • Elmyr de Hory
  • Enez
  • England
  • English law
  • Eric Hebborn
  • Erich Schlomovic
  • erik nemeth
  • Ernst Schöeller
  • Ernst Schöller
  • ERR
  • estimation
  • Ethiopia
  • Euphronios krater
  • European Union
  • evidence
  • executive director
  • exhibit
  • expert
  • expertise
  • Fabio Isman
  • fake
  • fakes
  • fakes and forgeries
  • Fall 2011
  • Fall 2012
  • Fall 2013
  • false insurance claim
  • Farrah Fawcett
  • FBI
  • FBI Art Crime Squad
  • federal rules of evidence
  • fingerprint
  • fire
  • fire alarms
  • flipper method
  • flipper theory
  • Florida
  • FOCUS
  • Foreign Cultural Exchange Jrisdictional
  • forensics
  • forged letters
  • forger
  • forger.
  • forgeries
  • forgery
  • Forum d'Avignon
  • Foundation E. G. Bürhle
  • Four Horses
  • French National Police
  • Fresch Palais
  • fundraising
  • Gabriel Allon
  • Gainsborough
  • galleries
  • Gardner Heist
  • Gavlebocken
  • gentleman thief
  • George Abungu
  • Georges Abungu
  • German forgers
  • Germanicus
  • Germany
  • Getty Museum
  • Getty Research Portal
  • Getty Villa
  • giacomo medici
  • Gianni Alemanno
  • Giles Waterfield
  • Giordano
  • Giorgio Vasari
  • Giovanni Bellini
  • Girl with a Pearl Earring
  • Giulio Carpioni
  • Giuseppe Medici
  • Glafira Rosales
  • Global Heritage Fund
  • glossary
  • Goddesses
  • Gold Rush
  • Goldfinch
  • Goya
  • Grand Mosque
  • Greece
  • Greek coins
  • Guatemala
  • Guggenheim
  • Guilia Rocco
  • guilty plea
  • gunpoint
  • Gurlitt art collection
  • Hammurabi
  • Han Van Meegeren
  • handbook
  • Hare with the Amber Eyes
  • HARP
  • Harry Ettlinger
  • Harvard
  • Hattusa Sphinx
  • Hawley
  • Headache Art
  • Helen Mirren
  • Henri Matisse
  • Herculaneum
  • high value art
  • HIldebrand Gurlitt
  • historical documents
  • holiday thefts
  • Holocaust Art Restitution Project
  • Holocaust restitution
  • Holocaust Restitution Project
  • Hong Kong
  • Honoré Daumier
  • Hot Art
  • Hôtel Lambert
  • Howard Spiegler
  • Hufnagel
  • Hugh Eakin
  • Hugo Simon
  • ICE
  • ICOM
  • iconoclasm
  • identification
  • IFAR
  • Il Veronese
  • Ilaria Dagnini Brey
  • Île St Louis
  • illegal actors
  • illegal trafficking
  • illicit antiquities
  • illicit art trade
  • illicit cultural property
  • illicit trafficking
  • Illuminated Manuscripts
  • immunity
  • in the media
  • Incallajta
  • Incan
  • Inferno
  • Insider theft
  • Integrated Risk Management
  • international
  • International Art Crime Conference
  • International Art Crime Tribunal
  • internet
  • Interpol
  • interview
  • Intifada
  • inventory
  • investigation
  • investigation problems
  • Ioana Patran
  • Irish Independent
  • Irish Travellers
  • Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
  • ISGM
  • Islam
  • Israel
  • Istanbul
  • Istanbul Archaeology Museum
  • Italy
  • J. Paul Getty
  • Jacob Meyer De Haan
  • Jacques Goudstikker
  • James Alex Bond
  • James Cuno
  • James Moore
  • James Tissot
  • James Whitey Bulger
  • Jane A. Levine
  • Japan
  • Jason Felch
  • Jean Jacques Fernier
  • jean-francois talbot
  • Jeffrey Gundlach
  • Jeu de Paume
  • Jewelry
  • Joe Medeiros
  • John Daab
  • john drewe
  • John Kleberg
  • john myatt
  • John Pollini
  • John Singleton Copley
  • Jonathon Keats
  • Joris Kila
  • Joshua Knelman
  • Judge Arthur Tompkins
  • judith harris
  • Jugha
  • Julia Brennan
  • Julian Radcliffe
  • Jungle Scawlers
  • Kabul
  • Kait Murphy
  • Kanchipuram
  • Karl von Habsburg
  • Katie Ogden
  • Ken Perenyi
  • Ken Polk
  • Kenya
  • Khachqar
  • Khalil-bey
  • King Tut
  • Kirsten Hower
  • Klimt
  • Knoedler & Company
  • Krak des Chevaliers
  • Krieghoff
  • Kunsthal Rotterdam
  • Kunsthistorisches Museum
  • L'Origine du Monde
  • LA
  • LA Times
  • La Valette's Sword and Dagger
  • LACMA
  • Lady in Gold
  • LAPD Art Theft Detail
  • largest art theft in Canada
  • Larry Coben
  • Laura Rush
  • Laurie Adams
  • Laurie Rush
  • Laviano
  • lawyer's committee for cultural heritage preservation
  • Lea Bondi Jaray
  • Leila Amineddoleh
  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Leopold Museum
  • Lessons from the History of Art Crime
  • Levy
  • Lifetime Achievement in Defense of Art
  • Llewelyn Morgan
  • local community
  • London
  • looted antiquities
  • looted art
  • Looted WII Art
  • Looting
  • Looting Matters
  • Lord Byron
  • Los Angeles
  • Lost Art Internet Database
  • Lost Princess
  • louvre
  • Lucas Cranach the Elder
  • Lucian Freud
  • Lucien Freud
  • Lucien Pissaro
  • Ludo Block
  • Lydian kline
  • Lynda Albertson
  • Lynn Nicholas
  • Maeve Sheehan
  • Maijer de Haan
  • Makkah
  • Malawai National Museum
  • Malawi National Museum
  • Mali
  • Malta
  • mana
  • Manders Collection
  • Maori
  • maps and manuscripts
  • marble monument
  • Marc Balcells
  • Marc Gabolde
  • Marc Masurovsky
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Marconi University
  • Marei von Saher
  • Mari
  • Maria Altmann
  • Marianne Rosenberg
  • Mario Buagiar
  • Mariotto di Nardo
  • Mark Landis
  • market
  • Martin Finkelnberg
  • Martin Kemp
  • Matisse
  • Matthew Bogdanos
  • Mauritshuis
  • Maurizio Seracini
  • Max Libermann
  • Max Stern
  • Maya Widmaier-Picasso
  • Medici
  • Meg Lambert
  • Melanesian wood carvings
  • Melvyn Kohn
  • memoir
  • Mes Aynak
  • messenger bags
  • metal detectors
  • Meyer de Haan
  • Michel van Rijn
  • Michelangelo
  • micro-roughness
  • mineral museum
  • minor modes
  • Mizzi Zimmerman
  • MoMA
  • Mona Lisa
  • Mona Lisa Foundation
  • Monet
  • money
  • money laundering
  • Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
  • Monuments Men
  • Moshe Dayan
  • Moshe Rynecki
  • Mougins Museum
  • movies
  • Munich
  • murals
  • Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
  • Musée d'Orsay
  • Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza
  • museum
  • Museum Catharijneconvent
  • museum funding
  • Museum of Anthropology
  • Museum of Decorative Arts in Bergen
  • Museum of Modern Art in Sweden
  • museum security
  • museum theft
  • Museum thefts
  • Museum van Bommel van Dam
  • museums
  • music
  • Mussolini
  • Myles J. Connor
  • mythology
  • Napoli
  • Narni
  • National Etruscan Museum
  • National Gallery in Prague
  • National Museum of Scotland
  • National Museum of Serbia
  • National Stolen Art File Search
  • Nativity
  • Nazi art
  • Nazi art theft
  • Nazi-era looted art
  • negotiate
  • Neil Brodie
  • Nemetz
  • netsuke
  • new york city
  • New Zealand
  • news media
  • Nice
  • Nicolas Poussin
  • Niels Rutger
  • Noah Charney
  • North America
  • Norton Simon Museum
  • Norway
  • Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Novi Sad City Museum
  • Nuraghic bronze statuettes
  • NYC
  • NYTimes
  • Odyssey Marine
  • Okinawa
  • Olympia
  • Oplontis
  • organized crime
  • Ori Z. Soltes
  • Orpheus mosaic
  • Oskar Kokoschka
  • Oxford
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Padma Kaimal
  • painting analysis
  • Palais Fesch
  • Palermo
  • Palestine
  • Palmyra
  • Paolo Ferri
  • Parioli
  • Paris
  • partage
  • Pasadena
  • Patras
  • Paul Gauguin
  • Paul Hendry
  • Paul Rosenberg
  • Penny Jackson
  • People Not Stones
  • Permanenten Vestlandske Kunstindustrimuseum
  • Peru
  • Peter Paul Rubens
  • Peter Silverman
  • Peter Watson
  • petition
  • photographers
  • Picasso
  • pickpockets
  • Pico Iyer
  • plastic
  • Poland
  • Polaroids
  • police cooperation
  • police seizures
  • political economy
  • Pompeii
  • Port of Rotterdam
  • Porta Romana
  • Portrait of Wally
  • Post Certificate Program
  • preservation
  • press conference
  • Pretoria Art Museum
  • Princeton
  • private insurance
  • private policing
  • profilometry
  • prosecution
  • provenance
  • Provenance Research Training Program
  • psychology of forgers
  • public awareness
  • QDE process
  • Quebec
  • Quebec Art Crime team
  • Questioned Document Examination
  • Rachel Ruysch
  • Rajlich
  • Ralph Frammolino
  • Rape of Europa
  • rare maps
  • Rathkeal Rovers
  • RCMP
  • Rebecca Dreyfus
  • recovered cultural patrimony
  • Recoveries
  • recovery
  • religious art
  • Rembrandt
  • Renoir
  • renovation
  • repatriation
  • research
  • residential
  • restitution
  • Restitution Court
  • restoration
  • Reuters
  • reward
  • RFID
  • Rhino thefts
  • Richard Abath
  • Richard Ellis
  • Rick Abath
  • Rick St. Hilaire
  • Rijksmuseum
  • robbery
  • Robert Edsel
  • Robert Gentile
  • Robert Mang
  • Robert Volpe
  • Robert Wittman
  • Robin Symes
  • Rodolfo Siviero
  • Roman bronzes
  • Romania
  • Romanian Police
  • Rome
  • Rosa da Tivoli
  • Rossetti
  • roughness
  • Rudolf Leopold
  • Ruoppolo
  • Ruth Godthelp
  • S. 2212
  • Sackler Galleries of Art
  • sale of stolen paintings
  • Salvator Rosa
  • Sandy Nairne
  • Santa Monica
  • Sarajevo Haggadah
  • Sardinia
  • Sassari
  • Saving Italy
  • scandals
  • Schinousa archive
  • Scholarship - Books
  • Schoonhoven
  • Schubert at the Piano
  • Schwabing Art Fund
  • Schwabinger Kunstfund
  • Scotland
  • Scotland Yard
  • sculptor
  • Sea of Galilee
  • security
  • Security guards
  • security options
  • security specialist
  • sentencing
  • Serbia
  • Sharon Cohen Levin
  • shipwrecks
  • Sicilian Mafia
  • Sicily
  • Sisley
  • Skokloster Castle
  • smash and grab
  • smuggling
  • snuffboxes
  • sociology of crime
  • Sotheby's Auction
  • South Africa
  • South India
  • Spain
  • speaker
  • Spring 2013
  • spring/summer 2012
  • St. Patrick's Day
  • stamp theft
  • Stealing Rembrandts
  • Stefano Alessandrini
  • stele
  • Stockholm
  • stolen antiquities
  • stolen art
  • Stolen Art Bulletins
  • stolen art database
  • Stolen Art Recovered
  • Stolen Artwork Restitution Act
  • Stolen the film
  • Stonehill Art Crime Symposium
  • Stonehill college
  • street art
  • strikes
  • Stroganov Collection
  • stuart george
  • study of art crime
  • Stuttgart Fine Art and Antiquities Squad
  • summary
  • Sureté du Québec
  • surveillance video
  • Sussex Police Art and Antiques Squad
  • Sustainable Preservation Initiative
  • Sweden
  • Swedish Royal Library
  • Switzerland
  • Sydney
  • Symes
  • Symposium
  • Syria
  • ta moko
  • Takeaway Rembrandt
  • Taliban
  • Tauranga Art Gallery
  • tax fraud
  • Teddy Kollek
  • television
  • Tess Davis
  • textiles
  • Thailand
  • The Caravaggio Conspiracy
  • The Empty Frame
  • the Getty
  • the Journal of Art Crime
  • The Journal on Art Crime
  • the medici conspiracy
  • the met
  • the missing piece
  • The Monuments Men
  • The Netherlands
  • The New York Times
  • The New Yorker
  • The Palermo Nativity
  • The Rape of Europa
  • The Scream
  • The Venus Fixers
  • theft
  • Thierry Lenain
  • Thomas Kline
  • Timbuktu
  • Tom Flynn
  • Tom Keating
  • Tom Mashberg
  • Ton Cremers
  • TPC
  • Trance
  • Transnational crime
  • travel
  • treasure
  • Triamphal Quadriga
  • trickster
  • Triton Collection
  • Turkey
  • Typology of interfaces
  • U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • U.S. News
  • UBC
  • Uffizi Gallery
  • UK
  • Ulrich Boser
  • Umbrians
  • undercover agent
  • UNESCO
  • United States
  • Universal Museums
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Unlisted Conference
  • unsolved art theft
  • urgency
  • US law
  • V&A Symposium
  • Valerie Higgins
  • Van Gogh
  • Van Gogh Museum
  • Vancouver
  • vandalism
  • Veletrzni Palace
  • venice
  • Vermeer
  • vernon rapley
  • Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Victoria Reed
  • Victorian crime
  • Vienna
  • Viking artifacts
  • Villa Giulia
  • Vincent van Gogh
  • Vincenzo Peruggia
  • violin recovery
  • violin theft
  • Virginia Curry
  • Virginia Museum of Arts
  • Wales
  • Wall Street Journal
  • war booty
  • warrant
  • wartime losses
  • Washington DC
  • West Africa
  • Whicher
  • William Kingsland
  • wine fraud
  • Witches in Air
  • Worcester Art Museum
  • workshop
  • world heritage sites
  • World Press Photo Exhibit
  • World War II
  • writer in residence
  • Yale University
  • Zurich

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (295)
    • ▼  December (29)
      • Was the repatriation of a footless 10th century st...
      • Fabio Isman reports on scholar Augusto Gentili's i...
      • Link to Radio New Zealand's Interview with Penny J...
      • "Selling Russia's Treasures" writes about the coll...
      • A flaming Swedish Christmas tradition – the annual...
      • Christos Tsirogiannis Interviews Marc Balcells in ...
      • Marc Balcells Introduces Christos Tsirogiannis in ...
      • Ilaria Dagnini Brey's "The Venus Fixers" and Rober...
      • Editorial Essay: Suzette Scotti writes about "Do U...
      • Christos Tsirogiannis on "From Apulia to Virginia:...
      • Derek Fincham's column "The Empty Frame" on "Detro...
      • Columnist David Gill on "The Cleveland Apollo Goes...
      • Noah Charney in "Lessons from the History of Art C...
      • Marine Fidanyan on "Destruction of Jugha Necropoli...
      • Brent E. Huffman Presenting Special Advance Screen...
      • Christie's New York Auction of "Antiquities" withd...
      • Duryodhana statue from Prasat Chen, Cambodia: "Vol...
      • Sotheby's sells Symes marble matched by Dr. Christ...
      • Felicity Strong on "The Mythology of the Art Forge...
      • Bojan Dobovšek and Boštjan Slak on "Criminal Ins...
      • Update on the search for the oeuvre of Polish arti...
      • "Victorian Art Theft in England: Early Cases and S...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: The Economist publishes le...
      • "The Crime That Pays? The Canadian Print Media's C...
      • Isabella Stewart Gardner Theft: Boston's WGBH News...
      • DIA evaluation of $2 billion includes only 'works ...
      • The Fall 2013 issue of The Journal of Art Crime No...
      • Persian chalice authentic or fake? Dutch Art Inves...
      • ARCA Associates participating in International Con...
    • ►  November (41)
    • ►  October (17)
    • ►  September (13)
    • ►  August (47)
    • ►  July (28)
    • ►  June (16)
    • ►  May (14)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (35)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (15)
  • ►  2012 (205)
    • ►  December (8)
    • ►  November (20)
    • ►  October (36)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (19)
    • ►  July (26)
    • ►  June (19)
    • ►  May (27)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (17)
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