ART HEISTS

 

How to Steal a Million (1966)

More compelling than old Hollywood glamor of the silver screen – discover the spectacular stories behind the world’s greatest art heists.


Art heists on the silver screen have always captivated audiences worldwide so much so that just the thought of art theft has us conjuring images of old Hollywood glamor like Audrey Hepburn in ‘How to Steal a Million’ (1966) or the more recent film by Steven Soderbergh, ‘Ocean’s Twelve’ (2004).

Despite the security measures in high-profile museums, art heists have been happening for decades and some would argue that real art heists are even more spectacular than their fictional counterparts.

While most thieves are motivated by the millions these master works are worth, some of them steal pieces by artists they personally know or admire – instead of the artist’s reputation in the art world or theoretical value of their work.

Unfortunately, the instant recognizably of these stolen masterpieces makes them so difficult to sell that even the potent black market isn’t interested in them. With only a small percentage of stolen art ever recovered – (an estimated 10%), real art heists have tragic repercussions for the art world and history as the world’s greatest art typically end up lost forever.

Let’s look back at some of the world's greatest art heists (excluding the large-scale art thefts by the Nazis during World War II and the Russian looting of Ukraine during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine):


THE MONA LISA THEFT (1911)

The most famous art heist of all time happened in 1911, when a former employee of the Louvre Museum in Paris stole the Mona Lisa painting by Leonardo da Vinci. The painting remained hidden in his apartment for two years before being caught.

OLD MASTERS LONDON MUSEUM THEFT (1966)

Rembrandt’s painting of Jacob de Gheyn III (1632) has been renamed by The Guinness Book of World Records because it has been stolen so many times. It was stolen first in 1973, then in 1981, and next in 1983. Its most recent theft was in 1966 from the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London by thieves who also removed works by Peter Paul Rubens, Gerard Dou, and Adam Elsheimer, along with two other Rembrandts.

The thieves, one of whom was eventually convicted, had hoped to sell the work on the black market, but police recovered it not long after, and the painting is still on view at the museum today.

Rembrandt van Rijn, Jacob de Gheyn III, 1632.

Photo : Dulwich Picture Gallery

SAN LORENZO CARAVIAGGIO THEFT (1969)

In 1969 thieves stole Caravaggio’s Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence (dating back to 1600-1609) from the Oratory of San Lorenzo in Palermo, Italy. There was hope in finding the masterwork when in 2017 Italy’s anti-Mafia commission reopened the case but with their new lead – now deceased – the Swiss art dealer informed the commission that he advised the thieves to cut up the canvas, since no one would purchase a work so famous. As of 2021, the search for the painting continues.

Caravaggio, Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence, 1600 or 1609.

Photo : Via Wikimedia Commons

SIR ALFRED AND LADY BEIT THEFT (1974)

In 1974, members of the Irish Republican Army banded together to rob the Russborough House, the Irish home of Sir Albert Beit, a British politician. Having tied up Beit, they took $20 million in art by Johannes Vermeer, Francisco Goya, and Peter Paul Rubens, which they later held out for ransom and were hoping to exchange for the release of IRA members who had been imprisoned for car bombings.

Bridget Rose Dugdale, the daughter of a British millionaire, was later sentenced to nine years in prison after three paintings were found in her cottage. Pleading “proudly and incorruptibly guilty” in court, Dugdale said that the theft was a protest the British government’s desire “to deprive us of our freedom to fight for Ireland and the freedom of the Irish people.” Some of the works Dugdale pilfered were stolen once again, for reasons of a less activist nature, in 1986, 2000, and 2001.

Sir Alfred and Lady Beit.

Photo : AP Photo

NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY THEFT (1985)

The most notorious heist in Mexican history, was in 1985 when a group of thieves stole the priceless Aztec and Mayan artifacts from the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City. Many of the stolen artifacts have never been recovered.

The National Museum of Archaeology in Mexico City.

Photo : AP

IMPRESSIONIST MASTERPIECIES IN PARIS THEFT (1985)

In one of the world’s most daring heists ever committed anywhere, the artwork that gave its name to the Impressionist Art Movement was stolen from Paris’s Musée Marmottan in1985. The thieves stole the work in broad daylight, having bought tickets like everyone else, they took Claude Monet’s iconic 1872 painting Impression, Sunrise, along with works by Berthe Morisot and Pierre-Auguste Renoir.

Nine guards and 40 visitors were held at gunpoint as some of the works were yanked from gallery walls. Although the nine stolen works were valued at $20 million, some said that Impression, Sunrise was priceless. In 1990, all nine works were recovered at a villa in Corsica, and seven people were arrested.

Claude Monet, Impression, Sunrise, 1872.

Photo : Francois Mori/AP

 THE ISABELLA STEWART GARDNER MUSEUM THEFT (1990)

The theft of 13 works of art from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston remains one of the largest art heists in history. The stolen pieces included paintings by Rembrandt, Vermeer, and Degas, and have never been recovered.

In the early morning, on the day after St. Patrick’s Day, thieves entered the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, subduing guards who were watching the Boston institution’s grounds at night.

In the hours that followed, the thieves walked away with riches of almost incalculable art-historical value: The Concert (ca. 1664), one of just 34 known Vermeer paintings; a 1633 Rembrandt painting featuring a boat navigating stormy waters; a Manet painting of a mysterious man in a café.

The FBI has said the works, which are still missing as of 2021, are valued at a collected $500 million. Because so much mystery surrounds the case, the heist continues to capture the minds of many, with some suggesting that the mob was involved, or that the guards were in on it, or that the works have indeed been destroyed.

Today, officials at the museum are unsure about the works’ whereabouts. In 2020, curator Ronni Baer told WBUR, “I wish I could somehow comfort myself in knowing they’re somewhere, but I don’t know if they still exist.”

Empty frames at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Photo : Josh Reynolds, File/AP

GALLERIA D’ARTE MODERNA KLIMT THEFT (1997)

Scholars consider Gustav Klimt’s Portrait of a Lady (1916–17) as an important work of art in art history as it is the only painting by which the Austrian artist painted over it midway through working on it.

The $60 million painting by Klimt had disappeared for over two decades. The painting went missing in 1997 during preparations for a show at the Galleria d’Arte Moderna in Piacenza, Italy. Then in December of 2019, the painting resurfaced when a gardener who was pruning ivy at the gallery discovered it hidden in a trash bag behind a panel in the building the year before.

Two men who are believed to be connected to other Italian art heists later confessed in a letter to an Italian journalist to having stolen the Klimt, which they said they concealed in the gallery’s exterior four years after having pilfered it. In the letter, the men, who remain at large, said they ultimately returned the work “as a gift to the city.”

NATIONAL MUSEUM THEFT (2000)

In 1993, three men committed Sweden’s biggest art heist at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm. They stole paintings by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque. They were later recovered; three men were charged for the theft.

Seven years later, an even grander heist took place at the National Museum in Stockholm, where thieves armed with a submachine gun relied on a complex array of distractions to break into the museum, steal three works by Rembrandt and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and get away safely.

Police feared that the artworks, valued in 2000 at $30 million, would be swiftly departing Eastern Europe, and a cinematic effort to halt any sale soon kicked off. In 2001, while doing an unrelated drug raid, the police uncovered one of the Renoirs. Then in 2005, while investigating a Bulgarian syndicate, international authorities caught criminals trying to sell the Rembrandt for $42 million. They got the painting back and four of the thieves were arrested while trying to make the purchase go through.

The Nationalmuseum.

Photo : Elmar Hartmann/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

AMSTERDAM VAN GOGH THEFT (2002)

In 2002, just as the Amsterdam Museum devoted to the Post-Impressionist artist was gearing up to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the artist’s birth, thieves stole two early paintings from the Vincent van Gogh Museum.

They had entered the museum by using a 15-foot ladder and breaking through a window. It was unclear what had happened to the works until 2016, when Italian authorities uncovered them in a farmhouse near Castellammare di Stabia, near Naples.

Police linked the thefts to the Camorra Mafia, and authorities arrested several traffickers in connection with the heist. As the works were unveiled once more to the public, Axel Rueger, the Van Gogh Museum’s director, was beaming. “Needless to say, it’s a great day for us today.”

A press conference held for the return of two stolen van Goghs at the Van Gogh Museum in 2003.

Photo : Peter Dejong/AP

 THE SCREAM MUNICH MUSEUM THEFT (2004)

If most heists take place in the wee hours of the morning, while institutions are closed, this heist unfolded in a decidedly different manner, in broad view of the public.

Amid tourists ogling at nearby masterpieces in the Munch Museum in Oslo, thieves took The Scream (1910) and Madonna (1894) by the Norwegian Expressionist in 2004. It wasn’t the first time a version of The Scream had been stolen, but it was, in some ways, more daring because of the throngs of people that were around when the thieves held guards at gunpoint and then departed in a black station wagon.

Rumors swirled about what happened afterward. Were the paintings burned? Was the mob involved? In the end, the paintings were recovered in 2006, six arrests were made, and the works went back to the Munch Museum.

The broken frames of two Edvard Munch works stolen in 2004 from the Munch Museum in Oslo.

Photo : Lise Aserud/Scanpix/AP

HENRY MOORE SCULPTURE THEFT (2005)

Henry Moore’s monumental sculptures often involved tons of bronze transformed into amorphous forms that take on human-like qualities. That made one sculpture, titled Reclining Figure, a prime target for thieves looking to make use of a booming market for scrap metal resulting from rising demand in China.

In 2005, thieves made off with the $18 million outdoor sculpture, which weighed a whopping two tons and was on view at the artist’s foundation in Hertfordshire, England. Then, in 2009, British police revealed that they believed the sculptures were cut up, melted down, and sold for £1,500. The people who allegedly destroyed the Moore work were never caught.

A two-ton Henry Moore sculpture was likely melted down after it was stolen.

Photo : Henry Moore Foundation/AP

SPIDER MAN PARIS MUSEUM THEFT (2010)

The art theft from Musee d’Art Moderne de la Ville in 2010 was so slick it was compared to Arsene Lupin, fictional theif of French Pulp fame, and of Spider-Man, who inspired the name of the bulgar who stole five major works of modern art from this Paris Museum.

The bulgar, Vjeran Tomic returned repeatedly to the museum, spraying acid on a window that allowed him to enter seamlessly. One night, at 3 a.m., he stole Henri Matisse’s Pastorale (1905). Then, because the alarms didn’t go off, he also took works by Amedeo Modigliani, Fernand Léger, Pablo Picasso, and Georges Braque.

Tomic is believed to have been working on commission for a dealer named Jean-Michel Corvez, who wanted to sell them. Once caught, Tomic was sentenced to eight years in prison by a judge who said that the theft involved taking “cultural goods belonging to humankind’s artistic heritage.”

Vjeran Tomic

Photo : Thibault Camus/AP

PARIS MUSEUM OF MODERN ART (2010)

In 2010, five paintings worth an estimated $100 million were stolen from the Paris Museum of Modern Art. The paintings, including works by Picasso and Matisse, were later recovered in a car parked outside the museum.

Image of Paris Museum of Modern Art from Futura Sciences

KUNSTHAL MUSEUM THEFT (2012)

In 2012, seven paintings, including works by Picasso, Monet, and Matisse, were stolen from the Kunsthal Museum in Rotterdam. The thieves were eventually caught and sentenced to prison, but the paintings have never been recovered.

Image Source: New York Times

GREEN VAULT MUSEUM THEFT (2019)

The Dresden jewelry heist, one of the largest art thefts ever committed, took place largely over the course of a single minute. At 4 a.m., thieves cut the power at the Grünes Gewölbe (Green Vault) museum and made off with riches that have been valued at a collected $1.2 billion by smashing an axe into a glass display case.

Among the works stolen are some of the most famous jewelry objects in the world—including a sword encrusted with 800 diamonds and the 49.84-carat Dresden White Diamond.

By the end of 2020, four were arrested for the heist, though German police were still on the hunt for the jewels, which were still not recovered by the start of 2021. In January of that year, one security firm floated a theory that criminals were trying to sell the jewels on the dark web.

The Green Vault museum.

Photo : Sebastian Kahnert/dpa via AP

 

BRIDAL GLOVES

 

An extraordinary twist that will have heads doing a double-take as you walk down the aisle. These are the chicest gloves for every bride.


If the thought of a veil or headband as part of your wedding day ensemble doesn’t necessarily “excite” you, then an extraordinary alternative may just be for you – bridal gloves.

Because ‘settling’ should never be part of your vocabulary, especially with matters of your wedding, this beautiful and regal wedding accessory adds grace and glamor to any bridal look. With a renewed interest in vintage and more classic looks, (check TikTok influencers spiking the prices of vintage boutiques, second hand stores, and goodwill locations), bridal gloves are back in vogue.

From wrist to elbow length, plain or embellished, and lace to satin sets, there exists the perfect bridal gloves for you. Let’s embrace this accessory with open arms! Here are some of the most glamorous styles on the market today:


EMBELLISHED GLOVES


FOR THE WHIMSICAL BRIDE

The perfect finishing romantic touch, try these works of delicate art. Opaque gloves from ‘Untamed Petals’ with fingers and completely hand beaded with pearls. 


BLOSSOM VEILS SHORT PEARL GLOVES AT ANTHROPLOGY FOR $145

VOLUSPA GLOVES WITH PEARLS AT UNTAMED PETALS FOR $384


FEATHERED GLOVES


FOR THE FLIRTY BRIDE

These gorgeous sheer gloves with feather trim are perfect for that flirty and joy-filled brides.


LEXI GLOVES AT UNTAMED PETALS FOR $135

TICKLED TOUCH WHITE GLOVES AT CLUB L FOR $90


SHEER GLOVES


FOR THE MODERN BRIDE

These beautiful and sleek sheer gloves will take your wedding day ensemble to another level.


BISHOP GLOVES AT UNTAMED PETALS FOR $78

DIANA TULLE GLOVES WHITE AT SELFIE LESLIE FOR $20


SILK GLOVES


FOR THE MINIMALIST BRIDE

Slip on these delicate silk white wedding gloves, then get ready for a ton of compliments on your big day. The bright white hue and silky material are perfect for your nuptials or pre-wedding events. Style these pieces with a satin gown for an unbelievably stunning look.


CAROLINA AMATO VIVIANA SILKK GLOVES AT ANTHROPOLOGIE FOR $101

CAROLINA AMATO FARFALLA GLOVES AT ANTHROPOLOGIE FOR $127


OPERA GLOVES


FOR THE DRAMATIC BRIDE

Who says you have to only wear white gloves to your wedding? These pink opera wedding gloves take the popular "Barbiecore" fashion trend to a whole new level. Want a different color, instead? This fun elbow-length style also comes in Black, Lime and Blue.


MODERN OPERA LENGTH PINK GLOVES AT ANTHROPOLOGIE FOR $20

FINGERLESS OPERA LENGTH TULLE GLOVES BEADING AT COCOMELODY FOR $40


TATTOO GLOVES


FOR THE FEMME FATAL BRIDE

Add a lavish finish to your wedding day style with these long fingerless gloves from Vera Wang. These irresistible gloves have a lace tattoo effect. And we absolutely love the idea of pairing them with a clean white slip dress.


FINGERTIPS OPERA LENGTH WEDDING GLOVES APPLIQUES AT COCOMELODY FOR $37

SOCIETY JAMES AUBREY LACE GLOVES AT ANTHROPOLOGY FOR $112

 

BEST GRAFFITI SPOTS

 

A platform for the voiceless, graffiti is some of the most sought after art. Here are the world’s best graffiti spots.


The blank canvas(es) for graffiti — bridges, buildings, and subways — gave a platform for the voiceless, a way for artists to express themselves and rebel against norms. Artists like Keith Haring, Invader, and Banksy pushed the boundaries of what’s considered ‘art’ with their world renowned graffiti.

Graffiti is a form of visual communication that involves writing or drawing on public surfaces, such as walls, buildings, or sidewalks. This art is created with various tools like spray paint, markers, and stencils. It is often associated with subcultures and countercultures, such as hip-hop, punk, and skateboarding.

Although graffiti is incredibly beautiful and thought provoking, too often it is seen as a form of vandalism and a violation of private property. Many cities and municipalities have laws and regulations against graffiti, and some even view it as a blight on their communities.

Despite controversies, graffiti continues to be an important part of contemporary culture, influencing everything from fashion to advertising to fine art. This visually stimulating medium can reveal a lot about a place and its people, making visiting murals and other public installations so popular when exploring a community.

As you will discover, Graffiti varies from country to country and city to city, representing the values and voices of its communities. Here are some of the best graffiti art destinations to visit from around the world:


MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA


Bright pigments line the alleyways in this Down Under city. In a 2008 Lonely Planet survey, Melbourne’s street art was named Australia’s most popular cultural attraction. Despite this statistic, the government of the graffiti management plan carefully monitors it, reviews applications from new and established talented artists, dismantling illegal installation and commissioning pieces.

You can spot state-approved works are done by Anthony Lister and Rone throughout Hosier and Caledonian Lanes in the Central Business District. You can also find Massive Street Art in Union Street and Bourke street.

It’s not uncommon to see newlyweds posing for wedding photos in front of murals, or local groups such as Melbourne Street Tours pointing out a new masterpiece in Hosier Lane. Love it or hate it, street art — when done right — can leave its chromatic fingerprint on a community.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

URBAN LANE IN MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA (via snappyvai on instagram)


LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM


London is a playground for Banksy, the eminent (and anonymous) street artist known for his satirical depictions. For travelers that are feeling similarly rebellious and fatigued by the beaten path, Shoreditch, the gateway to London’s East End, is the place to be.

Wherever you look, stickers, sculptures and spray paint embellish the district’s buildings. Shoreditch Street Art Tours’ guide NoLionsInEngland has spent more than a decade photographing, writing and critiquing the area, and can provide an inside look at the movement. 

SHOREDITCH, LONDON

SHOREDITCH, LONDON


DIRCKSENSTRASSE, GERMANY


If you walk along the train tracks on Dircksenstrasse from Hackescher Markt until Alexanderplatz, you’ll discover a wide array of street art creations by both unknown and famous artists along a roughly half-mile stretch of wall.

The art displayed here covers a wide range of mediums, including paste-ups, poster art, sculptures, sticker art, graffiti, and stencil art. The street art landscape here also changes quickly so you can always expect to find something new.

DIRCKSENSTRASSE, GERMANY

BERLIN FRIEDRICHSHAIN, GERMANY


LOS ANGELES, USA


Historically, music and graffiti have gone hand in hand, from album covers to underground publicity stunts, and Los Angeles has been a nurturing mother to both respective art forms. Often dubbed the “Creative Capital of the World,” murals can be found in almost every nook and cranny from the Venice to Los Feliz neighborhoods.

For a self-guided outing, Mural Maps LA is a Google Maps overlay that marks locations to admire street art. If clients prefer an escorted experience, LA Art Tours conducts a treasure-hunt-style walking tour around downtown LA and the Arts District. The transitory nature of the paintings keeps things fresh and exciting — what’s there today could be gone tomorrow.

16TH AND CENTRAL (LA, USA)

VENICE ART WALLS (LA, USA)


ISTANBUL, TURKEY


Since 2012, the annual street art festival Mural Istanbul has turned the buildings of the historic Kadikoy neighborhood into a vivid outdoor museum. Through a partnership between the municipal government and CEKUL Foundation, which protects and promotes cultural values, extraordinary painters are brought in from abroad to not only beautify dreary blank facades, but also to cultivate local talent. Its resounding success has catapulted the city to the forefront of the public art scene.

ISTANBUL, TURKEY

ISTANBUL, TURKEY

ISTANBUL, TURKEY

 

RED ONION REVIVAL

 

More than a piece of decor on your dinner plate, the red onion is a vibrant yet powerful vegetable that carries tremendous health benefits.


While the red onion is well respected and a common ingredient in cuisines around the world, in America this rich and colorful vegetable is more likely to be overlooked. Most commonly used as an ingredient or piece of décor on the side of your dish, red onions are vibrant, powerful vegetables that add flavor and depth to dishes with little to no calories.

Traditional medicine has known of red onions greatness and utilized them for centuries due to their antibacterial and anti-inflammatory properties. As well as it’s well-known reputation to fight food poisoning and even prevent cancer. This vegetable is also chock full of health benefits that include the following.

ANTIOXIDANTS

Red onions are a great source of antioxidants. Antioxidants help protect the body against damage from free radicals. Free radicals are unstable molecules that damage cells leading to inflammation and disease. Red onions are also rich in vitamin C, another antioxidant with many health benefits like fighting against infections and boosting immune system.

GREAT DIETARY FIBER

For a healthy digestive system, fiber is key because fiber helps digestion by moving food through the digestive tract. Red onions also have prebiotics which are a type of dietary fiver that helps feed the good gut bacteria, helping increase their diversity and numbers, thus enhancing your digestive health even further. Red onions also have sulfur compounds that help reduce growth of bad bacteria.

CANCER PREVENTION

Red onions contain high levels of quercetin which is a type of flavonoid that has been shown to have anti-cancer properties. Quercetin works in various ways including neutralizing harmful free radicals that can cause cell damage, potentially leading to cancer. Quercetin also prevents cancer by inducing cell death and inhibiting its growth.

Research of various test tube studies have revealed quercetin’s ability to suppress growth of cancerous cells as well as induce cancer cell death in prostate cancer. (Other studies that have affirmed the same effects on other forms of cancer as well such as ovarian, colon, breast, blood, bladder, and lung cancers.)

BOOSTS IMMUNITY

Red onions ensure a strong and healthy immune system. One way to ensure you maintain a strong immune system is to consume immune-boosting foods like red onions. Red onions are a great source of antioxidants. They contain vitamins A and C, quercetin, and sulfur compounds which boost immunity. These nutrients work together to improve the body’s ability to fight off infections.

 HEALTHY DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

A healthy digestive system makes it easier to lose weight, improve brain functions, and boosts your immune system. Ensure yourself these benefits by adding red onions to your diet.

PROMOTES HEART HEALTH

Red onions are a rich source of antioxidants and offer several benefits for heart health. Studies have shown that red onions can help lower cholesterol and triglyceride levels, as well as reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke. They also contain quercetin, a compound that has been shown to protect against heart damage. In addition, the sulfur compounds in red onions can help to improve blood circulation and reduce inflammation.

LOWERS BLOOD PRESSURE

Consuming red onions can help reduce blood pressure in people with hypertension. A study published by the American Journal of Hypertension discovered that those who ate a diet rich in flavonoids (like those in onions) had a significant reduction in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. In a human study taking a daily quercetin supplement was shown to lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure by 5mmHg and 26mmHg, respectively.

 IMPROVES ORAL HEALTH

Red onion contains sulfur compounds that have antibacterial properties. This means they can help fight the bacteria that cause bad breath, tooth decay, cavities, and gum disease. Additionally, onions can help reduce the risk of developing oral cancer. Plus, the high levels of antioxidants in red onions can help reduce any inflammation in the mouth and speed up healing.


REVIVE RED ONIONS IN YOUR DIET WITH THESE MOUTH-WATERING RECIPES

Below are some delightful and delicious recipes with red onion as the main ingredient. These dishes are sure to convince you that a red onion can be more than just a supporting character on your plate.


RED ONION RINGS

These lightly breaded onion rings let the flavor of the red onion shine through. Best part? They're ready in just 10 minutes, meaning you have more time to relax after dinner.

 FRENCH RED ONION SOUP

With two types of onion — red and sweet yellow — this classic soup is brimming with rich, oniony flavor. Serve it up with a thick layer of cheese and sprinkling of fresh herbs for that restaurant-quality experience.

RED ONION, FETA, AND TOMATO SALAD

Red onion slices, crumbled pieces of feta cheese, and cherry tomatoes makes this summer salad the most excellent choice for those steamy days. Add balsamic vinegar or a citrusy dressing for that finishing touch! YUM!