Recovery Vans

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg
Showing posts with label stolen art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stolen art. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 May 2013

Will the ashes in a stove in Romania prove to be the remains of the seven paintings stolen from the Triton Foundation exhibit at the Kunsthal Rotterdam?

Posted on 23:30 by Unknown
Photograph of the image of the Matisse
painting from the Triton Foundation
 stolen from the Kunsthal Rotterdam
 on October 16, 2012.
by Catherine Schofield Sezgin, ARCA blog Editor 

The prosecutor's office in Romania suspects the seven Triton Foundation paintings stolen from the Kunsthal Rotterdam last October 16 may have been destroyed, Agency France-Presse reported May 29. Art Hostage blogger blames this rumor on the failure to offer a reward for the return of this and other stolen art. Two years ago, reports surfaced that the paintings stolen from the Museé d'Art Moderne de la ville de Paris had been thrown in the trash.

According to AFP, investigators are examining ashes taken from the home of the mother of one of the suspects Kunsthal Rotterdam thieves to determine if they include remains of the stolen paintings, including works by Picasso, Monet and Matisse. Seven Romanians have reportedly been charged with the theft. Destruction of the paintings would eliminate evidence in the even the stolen works could not be sold or ransomed back to the art gallery in The Netherlands.

The Dutch website NU.NL quotes the lawyer for one of the suspects as denying that the ashes are any proof that the paintings were destroyed.

Here is a link to previous posts on the ARCA blog covering the Kunsthal Rotterdam theft, including information about the stolen paintings.

On the blog Art Hostage, Paul "Turbo" Hendry, a self-described former stolen art trafficker, blames destruction of stolen paintings on the lack of financial incentives to recovering or returning stolen art.
Read More
Posted in art theft, destruction, Matisse, Monet, Picasso, Romania, stolen art, Triton Collection | No comments

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Dan Brown's fictional Robert Langdon uses the "ARCA Web site" in "Inferno" to research the Horses of St. Mark's in Venice

Posted on 12:15 by Unknown
The Horses of St. Mark's (The Triamphal Quadriga)
by Catherine Schofield Sezgin,
ARCA Blog Editor-in-Chief

In Chapter 17 of Dan Brown's Inferno published May 14 by Doubleday, (and reviewed by Janet Maslin in The New York Times), the fourth book featuring Robert Langdon, the fictional Harvard University professor of religious iconography and symbology, researches the Horses of St. Mark's: 

As it turned out, the powerful bodies of the early Friesian horses had inspired the robust aesthetic of the Horses of St. Mark’s in Venice. According to the Web site, the Horses of St. Mark’s were so beautiful that they had become “history’s most frequently stolen pieces of art.”

Langdon had always believed that this dubious honor belonged to the Ghent Altarpiece and paid a quick visit to the ARCA Web site to confirm his theory. The Association for Research into Crimes Against Art offered no definitive ranking, but they did offer a concise history of the sculptures’ troubled life as a target of pillage and plunder.

This appears to be a reference to the blog post(s) by Judge ArthurTompkins, an ARCA Lecturer, written in June of 2011: The Four Horses of the Basilica San Marco, Venice (Part I); More on the History (Part II); Continued Short History (Part III); and The Four Horses Rest Inside St. Mark's Basilica in Venice After Being Plundered from Constantinople in the 13th Century (Part IV). On the ARCA blog is another post about the "The Triamphal Quadriga" in Paris Diary: Replica of Stolen Art at Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel.

Then Brown is a bit more definitive about what academics would question:

The four copper horses had been cast in the fourth century by an unknown Greek sculptor on the island of Chios, where they remained until Theodosius II whisked them off to Constantinople for display at the Hippodrome. Then, using the Fourth Crusade, when Venetian forces sacked Constantinople, the ruling doge demanded the four precious statues be transported via ship all the way back to Venice, a nearly impossible feat because of their size and weight. The horses arrived in Venice in 1254, and were installed in front of the façade of St. Mark’s Cathedral.

More than half a millennium later, in 1797, Napoleon conquered Venice and took the horses for himself. They were transported to Paris and prominently displayed atop the Arc de Triomphe. Finally, in 1815, following Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo and his exile, the horses were winched down from the Arc de Triomphe and shipped on a barge back to Venice, where they were reinstalled on the front balcony of St. Mark’s Basilica.

Although Langdon had been fairly familiar with the history of the horses, the ARCA site contained a passage that startled him.

The decorative collars were added to the horses’ necks in 1204 by the Venetians to conceal where the heads had been severed to facilitated their transportation by ship from Constantinople to Venice.
Read More
Posted in ARCA, Dan Brown, Four Horses, Inferno, stolen art, Triamphal Quadriga, venice | 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.
Read More
Posted in documentary, Mona Lisa, stolen art, Stolen Art Recovered, the missing piece | No comments

Thursday, 9 May 2013

Norway Celebrates 150 Anniversary of Munch's birth; BBC Broadcast Interviewed Charley Hill last February on the Successful Return of The Scream in 1994

Posted on 22:23 by Unknown
Celebrating the 150 anniversary of the birth of Edvard Munch, the National Museum and Munch Museum in Norway will exhibit more than 200 of the artist's paintings in "Munch 150" on June 2.

Here's a link to a BBC World Service broadcast last heard in February near the anniversary of the 1994 theft of Edvard Munch's The Scream. Charley Hill, former undercover police officer for Scotland Yard's Art and Antiquities Squad (his boss was ARCA Instructor Dick Ellis), describes how he posed as Chris Roberts, a consultant with the Getty Museum to negotiate the purchase of the stolen painting. The broadcast concludes the show with the statement that three of the four convicted of the theft successfully appealed on the grounds that Mr. Hill entered Norway under a fake passport.

Here's a summary of the facts on the 1994 theft as reported by the BBC.

Theresa Veier, an art history and lawyer in Oslo, wrote for the ARCA Blog about the artist and the theft of his work more than 65 years after Edvard Munch's death.
Read More
Posted in Charley Hill, Dick Ellis, Edvard Munch, Norway, stolen art | No comments

Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Florida Sheriff Reviving Search for Religious Paintings Stolen from Museum of the Cross in 1968

Posted on 16:00 by Unknown
A Sarasota County sheriff's detective in Florida, Detective Kim McGrath, is reviving the search for 15 religious paintings by Saturday Evening Post illustrator Ben Stahl which were stolen from his Museum of the Cross on April 16, 1968.


Associated Press' Tamara Lush reported on the new search for the paintings stolen more than four de cades ago (Florida's Herald Tribune, "Stolen Religious Art an Enduring Mystery").
Commissioned to illustrate a Bible for the Catholic Press in the mid-1950s, Stahl painted the 14 Stations of the Cross. Later, he decided to paint larger versions, along with a 15th painting, "The Resurrection," because he wanted his work to end on a positive note. All 15 paintings were 6 feet by 9 feet, and painted in oil. In 1965, Stahl and his wife moved to Sarasota and decided to open a museum for the large-scale paintings. Called "The Museum of the Cross," it was one of the main tourist attractions in the area at the time.


One witness remembered seeing a white van near the museum that night, while Stahl recalled two visitors from South America who asked odd questions in the days prior to the theft. The trail eventually went cold, and Stahl and his family didn't think investigators were trying as hard as they could.
"It was devastating," said Regina Briskey, Ben Stahl's daughter, who was working at the museum at the time. "It was incomprehensible, because at that time in Sarasota, there was hardly any crime."
The artist's son, David Stahl, wrote on a website that he even contacted witnesses and possible informers around Florida, but claimed authorities didn't pay attention.
Keeping an old art theft case open:
McGath -- who is also investigating the cold case of a quadruple murder in 1959 in Sarasota and its possible link to the "In Cold Blood" killers in Kansas -- said she is poring over records. She wants to talk to anyone who might have information about the Stahl art heist. 
Interpol Washington is also involved. Spokeswoman Nicole Navas said this week that officials recently sent out a message to all 190 Interpol member countries in an attempt to renew interest in the case, which she said is one of 500 open art heist cases being investigated by the agency.
Read More
Posted in Florida, religious art, stolen art | No comments

Sunday, 24 March 2013

Kunsthal Rotterdam Art Heist: Looking at the Paintings Stolen from the Triton Foundation (Provenance Information Added)

Posted on 05:41 by Unknown
Lucian Freud, Woman with Eyes Closed
by Catherine Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor

The seven paintings stolen from the Kunsthal Rotterdam on October 16 remain missing. On January 21, Romanian police arrested three men in connection with the gallery heist. March 4, Dutch police arrested a Romanian woman believed to be an accomplice. On March 13, a German man who arrested for blackmail after an alleged attempt to sell the Triton stolen paintings back to the foundation. The mother of one of the defendants arrested for the theft has claimed that she destroyed two of the paintings.

Last December Yale University published Avant-Gardes 1870 to the Present: The Collection of the Triton Foundation which offers more information on the stolen paintings stolen from the Triton Foundation. This catalogue is written by Sjraar van Heugten, former head of collections at the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, and an independent art historian. Here the catalogue's information on the stolen paintings:

Lucian Freud: Woman with Eyes Closed (2002), oil on canvas, 30.5 x 25.4 cm. Provenance: Triton Foundation, acquired from the artists, 2002.


Paul Gauguin, La Fiancée 
Paul Gauguin, Woman Before a Window, 'The Fiancée, 1888, an oil on canvas. annotated in the lower right in red paint (damaged) La Fiancée; signed and dated lower right beneath annotation in black paint P Go 88, 33.8 x 41 cm. Provenance: Private collection, England; Kunsthandel (art dealer) Franz Buffa, Amsterdam; collection Allan and Nancy Miller, Solebury, Pennsylvania, 1949; auction Galerie Charpentier, Paris, 17 June 1960, no. 87 (unsold); auction Sotheby's, London, 4 July 1962, no. 75 (unsold); auction Christie's, Tokyo, 27 May 1969, no. 302; collection Samuel Josefowitz, Lausanne, circa 1981; auction Drouot-Montaigne, Paris, 3 April 1990, no. 58; Triton Foundation, 1997.


Matisse's Reading Woman
Matisse's Reading Woman in White and Yellow, 1919 was painted in the South of France in the suburb of Cimiez. The 31 x 33 cm work is "oil on canvas mounted on board" and "signed lower left Henri Matisse". Comment: Certificate of authenticity by Wanda de Guébriant, 12 Mar. 1996. Provenance: Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, acquired from the artists on 23 June 1919, no. 21624; Bernheim-Jeune Frères, acquired on 20 May 1931; collection Josse and Gaston Bernheim-Jeune, 1931; Bignou Gallery, New York; private collection, New York, 1947; collection Dr. Peter Nathan, Zurich, 1953; collection Emil G. Bührle, Zurich, acquired from the above on 8 December 1953; Foundation Emil G. Bührle Collection, since 1960; Triton Foundation, 1999.

Jacob Meyer De Haan, Self-Portrait

Jacob Meyer De Haan (Amsterdam 1852 - Amsterdam 1895), Self-Portrait against Japonist Background, circa 1889-1891, oil on canvas, 32.4 x 24.5 cm. Provenance: Collection Marie Henry, Le Pouldu; collection Ida Cochennec, daughter of the artists and Marie Henry; auction Cochennec Collection, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 24 June 1959, no. 77; Marlborough Fine Art Ltd, London; collection Mr. and Mrs Arthur G. Altschul, New York, acquired in July 1961; Triton Foundation, 2002 (on long-term loan to the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, 2002-2004).

Sideways view of Monet's Waterloo Bridge
Claude Monet: Waterloo Bridge, London (1901), pastel on brown laid paper, signed lower right Claude Monet, 30.5 x 48.0 cm. Provenance: Collection Werner Herold, Switzerland, circa 1917; private collection, USA, 1970; Triton Foundation, 1998.

Another sideway's view: Monet's
Charing Cross Bridge, London
Claude Monet's Charing Cross Bridge, London, 1901, pastel on brown gray laid paper, annotated and signed lower right à J. Massé/au jeune chasseur/d'Afrique Claude Monet, 31.0 x 48.5 cm. Provenance: Collection J. Massè, gift from the artist; auction Hôtel des Ventes, Enghien-Les-Bains, 24 Nov. 1985, no. 39; auction Hôtel des Ventes, Enghien-Les-Bains, 18 Mar. 1989, no. 6; private collection, Triton Foundation, 1998.

Picasso's Head of a Harlequin
Painted the year before the artist's death, Picasso's Head of a Harlequin (1971) is in "pen and brush in black ink, colored pencil and pastel on thick brown wove paper" (38 x 29 cm) and is "signed and dated in the lower right Picasso/12.1./71. Provenance: Galerie Louise Leiris, Paris; private collection, Europe; Michelle Rosenfeld Gallery, New York; private collection, USA; Finartis Kunsthandels AG, Zug; private collection, USA, 2004; Triton Foundation, 2009.
Read More
Posted in Jacob Meyer De Haan, Kunsthal Rotterdam, Lucien Freud, Matisse, Monet, Pablo Picasso, Paul Gauguin, stolen art | No comments

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Private insurer offers up to $50,000 reward for information leading to the return of a Renoir painting stolen from a Texas residence last year; FBI adds "Madeleine Leaning on Her Elbow with Flowers in Her Hair" to Top 10 Art Crimes

Posted on 16:10 by Unknown
Today the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued a press release adding a stolen Renoir painting, "Madeleine Leaning on Her Elbow with Flowers in Her Hair", to its list of Top 10 Art Crimes and advertising a reward for up to $50,000 to be paid by a private insurer for information leading to the picture's recovery. The 1918 painting by Pierre-Auguste Renoir was stolen on September 8, 2011. According to the FBI:
The homeowner was watching television when she heard a loud noise downstairs. When she went to investigate, she was confronted by an armed man in a ski mask. ...The painting was taken with its frame intact from the stairwell where it hung. The masked robber, who forced entry through the back door of the home, is described as a white male, 18 to 26 years old, who weighs about 160 pounds and is approximately 5’-10” tall. He was armed with a large-caliber, semi-automatic handgun.
According to Anita Hassan reporting for The Houston Chronicle, the thief entered the home and demanded money and diamonds but the owner, protective of her sleeping son upstairs, offered her painting by Renoir as the most valuable monetary asset available.

The original reward was announced at $25,000, according to information released by The Art Loss Register who reported that the Houston Police Department and the FBI were working on the investigation. The FBI estimates that the stolen painting is worth $1 million. The private insurer is not identified. The painting's image has also been included in databases for The Art Loss Register (accessible for a fee) and Interpol (free access to registered users).

Stolen Renoir paintings

In addition to the Texan "Madeleine Leaning on Her Elbow", Interpol's Stolen Art Database identifies 18 Renoir paintings as stolen and still missing since 1938.  The paintings have been stolen from places in Switzerland, France, Argentina, Germany, the United States, Japan, and Italy.

In mid-June 2012, $21 million worth of artwork, including a painting by Renoir and ten drawings by Picasso, were stolen from a businessman in a violent assault in Olomouc in the Czech Republic.

Recovered Renoir paintings

A Renoir stolen from Rome in 1984 re-appeared in Venice in 2009 just months after another Renoir painting stolen from Milan 33 years earlier had also been recovered.

An international law enforcement operation recovered Renoir's "Young Parisian" in Los Angeles and Rembrandt's "Self Portrait" in Copenhagen in 2005.  The two pictures, along with another Renoir, were stolen from the Swedish National Museum in Stockholm in 2000 when thieves used machine guns, tire spikes, and diversionary car bombs to penetrate the museum's security. Stockholm County Police had recovered Renoir's "Conversation" four years earlier in July of 2001.
Read More
Posted in FBI Art Crime Squad, private insurance, Renoir, reward, stolen art | No comments

Thursday, 19 July 2012

Happy Birthday Edgar Degas: Works Recovered and Still Missing

Posted on 07:09 by Unknown

Edgar Degas.  Count Lepic and His Daughters.
 1871.  Oil on canvas. 65.5 x 81 cm.
E.G. Bührle Collection, Zurich.

by Kirsten Hower, ARCA European Correspondent

 Today we honour the birthday of French Impressionist artist Edgar Degas (1834-1917).  Best known for his depictions of dancers, Degas was both a sculptor and painter who combined tradition with change in the 19th century art world.  Like many famous artists, his work has been admired and fallen prey to the criminal world.  One of his paintings, Count Lepic and His Daughters of 1871, was part of a four year recovery that was only recently announced upon its completion in April of this year.
   On the afternoon of Sunday, February 10, 2008, three masked gunman stole four paintings from the E.G. Bührle Collection in Zurich—one of the greatest Impressionist and Post-Impressionist museums in Europe.  The four paintings, one each by Cézanne, Degas, van Gogh, and Monet, were valued at $163 million and have all been recovered as of April 2012.[i]  Degas’ painting was actually recovered in 2009, but this information was kept quiet until the recovery of the final and most expensive painting, Cézanne’s The Boy in a Red Vest, was recovered in 2012.  There was some damage to the paintings which had been cut from their frames, including the Degas which thankfully only suffered damage to the edges of the painting.[ii] 
  Degas’ group portrait of Count Lepic and his two daughters has an entirely Impressionist look, particularly the girls who look rather Cassatt-like, though it has moments of looking far more like charcoal or watercolour rather than an oil painting on canvas.  Lepic’s face appears unfinished, his expression just shy of unreadable save for the attentive gaze of a father for his daughter.  The two girls stare out at the viewer with gazes both knowing and angelically innocent.  One can imagine even a hardened criminal becoming uneasy under such a gaze, especially after having damaged the painting during the theft.
   Thankfully for Degas, this particular theft of his artwork had a happy ending.  Five works by Degas do not have such a happy ending and are currently missing in conjunction to the infamous Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum theft of 1990, including Cotège aux Environs de Florence (pencil and wash on paper).  Hopefully these works will one day have their happy ending as well.

Kirsten Hower is the Academic Program Assistant for ARCA.  She is currently finishing her MLitt at Christie's Education.


[i]Uta Harnischfeger and Nicholas Kulish, “At Zurich Museum, a Theft of 4 Masterworks,” New York Times, February 12, 2008.
[ii] Swissinfo.ch, “Stolen Degas recovered damaged,” April 27, 2012.
Read More
Posted in Degas, stolen art, Stolen Art Recovered | No comments

Monday, 14 May 2012

REVISITING BOOKS: Peter Watson on the Palermo Nativity in the 1984 book "The Caravaggio Conspiracy"

Posted on 00:30 by Unknown
The Palermo Nativity
by Catherine Schofield Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor

Part one of three

Repeated rumors of the destruction of Caravaggio's painting, Nativity with San Lorenzo and San Francesco, reminded me of Peter Watson's telling of how an earthquake in southern Italy interupted his attempts to recover the painting ten years after it was stolen from a chapel in Sicily.

Watson's 1984 book, The Caravaggio Conspiracy (Doubleday), documents the journalist's cooperation with 'Italy's greatest art detective', Rodolfo Sievero, to recover The Nativity in 1979.  Watson, a British journalist, and Sievero, who at the time was 'an Italian diplomat' who headed 'a small section of the Italian Foreign Office exclusively concerned with the recovery of stolen art', concocted a plan to get one of Siviero's suspects in the theft of The Nativity to offer the Caravaggio or another stolen painting to Watson.

In the eighth chapter of the book, Watson sympathetically describes Michaelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio as a maverick painter whose erratic behavior and subsequent criminal record may have been the result of an illness contracted in his early years in Rome.  "Caravaggio's approach to his art -- conveying miraculous biblical episodes through vividly real but otherwise ordinary people, revolutionized painting," Watson wrote.

As an aside, I point out that in his summary of Caravaggio's career, Watson highlights the contribution after 1590 of one of the painter's supporters who originated from Amelia, home to ARCA's summer program and its International Art Conference:
A certain Monsignor Petrignani provided him with a room -- it was hardly a studio -- and Caravaggio began to turn out many pictures.  The younger painter enjoyed this work more, but though he was prolific he was not successful.  The arrangement eventually bore fruit, however, through the good offices of an art dealer named Valentino who had exhibited paintings by Caravaggio and finally succeeded in selling several of them to Cardinal del Monte.
The 16th century Palazzo Petrignani hosted the 2010 International Art Crime Conference in Amelia.

In 1609, running from knights and friends of a man who died by the painter's sword, Caravaggio painted what Watson describes as the "Adoration of the Child with St. Francis and St. Lawrence" (also  known as the "Palermo Nativity") in the church of the Oratorio of San Lorenzo in Palermo. Watson wrote:
It is an unusual painting for Caravaggio: it almost seems that the events of the preceding months were beginning to catch up with him.  It is still a Caravaggio but it is as if he had begun to doubt his own vision.  The peasants watching the event are in the old, familiar style.  They are ordinary, balding, tired rather shabby people lost in wonder.  But Mary particularly is a more stylized figure: her features are regular, smooth, her skin is like marble.  There is even an angel descending from on high.  Some sort of change appeared to be coming over Caravaggio.... Whoever had stolen it had taken more than an object; he had deprived the world of a sign of change in the mind -- the somewhat unstable mind -- of a great man.
Caravaggio's eight foot by seven foot painting of the Nativity served as the altarpiece for the Baroque chapel of the Oratory of San Lorenzo for 359 years until it had been "hacked" "out of its splendid frame with a razor blade," Watson wrote.

A few weeks after the theft, Siviero, Watson wrote, had received a message that the theft had been revenge for what Siviero had done 'to the Mafia over the Ephebus in Foligno."

Part two continued on May 16.
Read More
Posted in Peter Watson, Rodolfo Siviero, Sicilian Mafia, stolen art, The Caravaggio Conspiracy, The Palermo Nativity | No comments
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • What Happened When Myles J. Connor, Jr. Spoke at the Milton Art Center in MA
    Myles J. Connor, Jr. & columnist Suzette Martinez Standring By Suzette Martinez Standring (suzmar@comcast.net) The flak and hubbub have ...
  • Was the repatriation of a footless 10th century statue to Cambodia this month related to Sotheby's history of selling Khmer pieces with "no published provenance" or "weak" collecting histories?
    This month's repatriation of a 10th century footless sandstone statue looted from an archaeological site in Cambodia has a backstory goi...
  • Felicity Strong on "The Mythology of the Art Forger" in the Fall 2013 issue of ARCA's Journal of Art Crime
    Felicity Strong uses the biographies of Han van Meegeren and Elmyr de Hory, amongst others, in her academic article on "The Mythology ...
  • Kunsthal Rotterdam Art Heist: Looking at the Paintings Stolen from the Triton Foundation (Provenance Information Added)
    Lucian Freud, Woman with Eyes Closed by Catherine Sezgin, ARCA Blog Editor The seven paintings stolen from the Kunsthal Rotterdam on October...
  • 2013 ARCA Art and Cultural Heritage Conference: Senior Police Inspector Toby Bull on “Property of a Hong Kong Gentleman, Art Crime in Hong Kong – Buyer Beware”
    Toby Bull ARCA’s Art and Cultural Heritage Conference (June 21-23, 2013), held in the ancient Umbrian town of Amelia, began with cocktails f...
  • The Monuments Men: Harry Ettlinger describes finding the stained glass windows of Strasbourg Cathedral in a salt mine
    Here's an eight minute video produced by Roberta Newman for the American Jewish Historical Society on activities of The Monuments Men wh...
  • Portrait of a Museum Robbery: The 1998 Theft of Tissot's "Still on Top" from the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki
    At ten minutes past 11 o'clock in the morning on Sunday, August 9th, 1998, a man with a shotgun entered the Auckland Art Gallery, threat...
  • Update on the search for the oeuvre of Polish artist Moshe Rynecki by his great-granddaughter
    Elizabeth Rynecki has written about her search to identify and recover her great-grandfather's oeuvre of art which Moesche Rynecki hid a...
  • Enez: Bulgaria - Turkey IPA Cross-Border Program Highlights Multicultural History of Castle Ruins in Northern Aegean Beach Town
    Enez Castle (Acropolis) - Restored by Turkish Ministery of Culture and the Department of Cultural Assets & Museums  by Catherine Sezgin,...
  • Bojan Dobovšek and Boštjan Slak on "Criminal Inspectors and Art Crime Investigation in Slovenia" in the Fall 2013 issue of ARCA's Journal of Art Crime
    Bojan Dobovšek and Boštjan Slak write on "Criminal Inspectors and Art Crime Investigation in Slovenia" in the Fall 2013 issue of...

Categories

  • "toxic" antiquities
  • 1911
  • 1954 Convention
  • 1970 Convention
  • 1970 UNESCO Convention
  • 1971 theft
  • 19th century
  • 2012
  • 2012 ARCA Award nominations
  • 2013
  • 2013 ARCA Annual Art And Heritage Conference
  • 2013 ARCA Award Winners
  • A.M.C. Knutsson
  • Adam and Eve
  • Adam Worth
  • Adele Bloch-Bauer
  • advisory panels
  • Afgan Archaeology Office
  • Afghanistan
  • Africa
  • After the Bath
  • Agrigento Ephebe
  • Alain Dumouchel
  • Alain Lacoursière
  • Alceo Dossena
  • Alfred Flechtheim
  • Altman
  • Ambroise Vollard
  • Amelia
  • American Greed
  • American Institute of Roman Culture
  • Amsterdam
  • Anders Burius
  • Andrea Meldolla
  • Andrew Higgins
  • Andy Warhol
  • Ann Shaftel
  • Anne-Marie O'Connor
  • annual conference
  • Anthony Amore
  • antiquities
  • antiquities looting
  • antiquities recovered
  • Antiquities Trade
  • Antonio Diziani
  • appeal
  • Apulian Gnathia
  • ARCA
  • ARCA 2011
  • ARCA 2012
  • ARCA 2012 masters
  • ARCA 2013
  • ARCA 2013 Conference
  • ARCA alum
  • ARCA Annual Conference
  • ARCA Art Crime Scholarship
  • ARCA Awards
  • ARCA Board of Trustees
  • ARCA CEO
  • ARCA Trustee
  • ARCH
  • archaeological artifacts
  • archaeological sites
  • Archaeology
  • Archeology
  • archives
  • armed conflict
  • armed robbery
  • Armenia
  • arson
  • art
  • Art & Business
  • Art Alert
  • Art and Heritage Law
  • Art and Law Policy
  • art and organized crime
  • art auctions
  • art authentication
  • art collecting
  • art conservation
  • Art Cops
  • art crime
  • art crime conference
  • art crime expert
  • art crime in war
  • art crime lecture
  • art crime statistics
  • art damage
  • art dealers
  • art destruction
  • art destuction
  • art expert
  • art forgery
  • art fraud
  • Art Guard
  • art heist
  • art historians
  • Art history
  • art hostage
  • art insurance
  • art law
  • Art Law and Policy
  • Art Loss Register
  • art policing
  • Art Policing and Recovery Award
  • art restitution
  • art restorer
  • art security
  • art theft
  • art theft anniversary
  • art theft arrests
  • art theft in film
  • art theft prosecution
  • art thief
  • art thieves
  • art trade
  • Artemisia Gentileschi
  • Arthur Brand
  • Arthur Tompkins
  • artifacts
  • ARTINFO
  • artists
  • ARTnews
  • Asia
  • Asian Studies
  • askos
  • Assyrian
  • astrolabe
  • Athens
  • Athlete of Fano
  • Auckland Art Gallery
  • auction house thefts
  • auctions
  • Augsburg
  • Augsburg prosecutor
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • authenticity
  • autographic arts
  • Aviva Briefel
  • Award for Art Protection and Security
  • Axum Obelisk
  • Azerbaijan
  • Babylon
  • Baltimore Art Museum
  • Banknotes
  • Banksy
  • Bar Leonardi
  • Battle of Anghiari
  • BBC
  • Becchina
  • Belgium
  • Beltracchi
  • Benin
  • Bernard Ternus
  • Bhutan
  • bicycling thieves
  • Bill Anderson
  • Bill Martin
  • Bill Reid
  • Bill Wei
  • Biltmore House
  • blackmail
  • Blanca Niño Norton
  • Bob Combs
  • Boijmans
  • Bolivia
  • Bonnie Czegledi
  • book review
  • Book Soup
  • book theft
  • books
  • Bosnia
  • Boston Globe
  • Boston MFA
  • Braque
  • Brent Huffman
  • Brighton Knockers
  • Britain
  • british museum
  • Broken Windows
  • Brueghel
  • Bucharest
  • Buddhas of Bamiyan
  • Buddhism
  • Bührle
  • burglary
  • Cairo
  • Calabria
  • Caledonian Boar Hunt
  • California
  • California law
  • Call for Papers
  • Cambodian art
  • Campania
  • Canada
  • Capitoline Museum
  • Carabinieri
  • Carabinieri Art Squad
  • Carabinieri Tutela Patrimonio Culturale
  • Caravaggio
  • Castel Sant'Angelo
  • Castellani
  • Catherine Sezgin
  • Catherine Whitney
  • Caveat Emptor
  • Cellini's Saliera
  • certificates of authenticity
  • Cezanne
  • Chappell
  • CHAPS conference
  • Charles A. Loeser
  • Charles Frederick Goldie
  • Charley Hill
  • Chasing Aphrodite
  • China
  • Chinese antiques
  • chris marinello
  • Christie's
  • Christopher Marinello
  • Christos Tsirogiannis
  • Church
  • city bankruptcy
  • civil forfeiture
  • Claude Picasso
  • Cleveland Apollo
  • Colgate University
  • collateral damage
  • collecting history
  • collections online
  • combat
  • Conference of Protection of Cultural Property in Asia
  • conferences
  • connoisseur
  • connoisseurship
  • conservation
  • Context Matters
  • convictions
  • copies
  • Cordoba
  • Cornelius Gurlitt
  • Corot
  • Corsica
  • Counterfeit Art
  • Counterfeit Money
  • counterfeiters
  • counterfeiting
  • Courbet
  • Courthouse News Service
  • credit fraud
  • criminal investigation
  • Criminals
  • criminology
  • Crispin Corrado
  • Croatia
  • cross-stones
  • crowdsourcing
  • cultural heritage
  • cultural intelligence
  • cultural landscapes
  • Cultural Plunder Database
  • cultural property
  • cultural property crimes
  • Cultural Property Panel
  • Cultural Property Protection
  • cultural property returned
  • Cultural protection
  • cultural repatriation
  • cultural restoration
  • cultural security
  • Curator of Provenance
  • 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)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile