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Warhol Paintings Stolen From LA Home

RAQUEL MARIA DILLON   09/12/09 12:47 AM ET   AP

Warhol Paintings

LOS ANGELES — A multimillion dollar collection of Andy Warhol portraits of Muhammad Ali and other sports superstars was stolen from a Los Angeles home, police said Friday.

The 11 color screenprints were taken from businessman Richard Weisman's home sometime between Sept. 2 and 3, said Detective Mark Sommer of the Los Angeles Police Department's art theft detail.

Ten of the 40-inch-square portraits feature famous athletes of the 1970s, including golfer Jack Nicklaus, soccer star Pele and figure skater Dorothy Hamill. The other is of Weisman, likely a commissioned portrait.

A $1 million reward was being offered for information leading to the return of the artwork.

The original prints were on display in Weisman's dining room and his house was locked up. It wasn't clear exactly when the silk screen paintings were taken or how the thieves got into the home.

The theft was discovered by the family's longtime nanny who arrived at the home to find the large prints missing from the walls. She immediately went to a neighbor's to call police, Sommer said.

"This was a very clean crime," Sommer said. "(The home) wasn't ransacked."

It wasn't known exactly how much the prints were worth but Weisman tried to sell the collection in 2002 for $3 million.

Weisman's home contained other valuable artwork but the rest of his collection was untouched.

"The theft of Warhol's 'Athlete Series' represents a profoundly personal loss to me and my family," Weisman said in a statement. Weisman, who published a book about his art collection called, "From Picasso to Pop," declined to comment further, saying he did not want to interfere with the investigation.

A neighbor saw a maroon van in the driveway of Weisman's home around the time of the robbery, and police are seeking more information about that, Sommer said.

Warhol became internationally famous in the 60s for his iconic image of a Campbell's soup can, his avant-garde films and his parties that mixed celebrities, artists, intellectuals and other beautiful people at his New York studio called "The Factory."

According to a catalog of Warhol's work, Weisman commissioned the artist in 1977 to create portraits of sports figures, including Chris Evert, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Nicklaus, Pele, Hamill, and Ali, said Brenda Klippel, the director of Martin Lawrence Galleries in Los Angeles, which has a large collection of Warhols.

"Warhol was always a portraitist and fascinated with anyone of fame or fortune, anyone in the public eye," Klippel said. "He wanted all of his imagery to be instantly recognizable. If Weisman was in his circle and had the money, he could commission what he wanted."

Detective Don Hrycyk said the weeklong delay in announcing the theft was to allow detectives to confirm the reward and gather descriptions and photographs of the missing artworks.

___

AP writer Thomas Watkins in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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08:08 AM on 09/13/2009
I wonder how much the owner had to pay to have them stolen?
I would think after a while they were tough to look at every day and this was easier than selling them when the tax is taken into account.
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12:18 AM on 09/13/2009
This story has had it's 15 minutes...Next.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReelBusy
I'm the Ghost of Hollywood Past
10:41 AM on 09/12/2009
Why did the nanny call the police from the neighbors house?
06:16 AM on 09/12/2009
These may be the worst of Warhol, from a phase in his career when he almost became a commercial artist again. I think Weisman sold Fred Hughes on the idea and Fred just told Andy to do it.

In his diary Andy mentions that when he was photographing Jack Nicklaus, Nicklaus never even really understood what was going on and Andy was squirming with embarrassment. It clearly wasn't a project he felt any connection with.

And I'm pretty sure I saw these prints for sale in a mall in San Jose...
03:28 AM on 09/12/2009
Pfff. See if his accounts are solvent, then look in his friends houses, where he stowed them.
06:10 AM on 09/12/2009
please, he would have had his picasso stolen as well...these were obviously warhol, even someone who knows nothing about art would know those were by warhol...

Im guessing it was a handyman, or someone who had worked in the house within the last year, 80% of the time that is the case..
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Ceregene
Love is not just a word it's a force
02:17 AM on 09/12/2009
A guy with this much money and no security cameras ...............

My parents art collection is not nearly worth 3 mil., but they have security cameras all over the place.
04:01 AM on 09/12/2009
What are you doing this weekend?
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Ceregene
Love is not just a word it's a force
12:33 PM on 09/12/2009
Along with parents family and some friends fighting, talking, scheming, etc. to save the life of our country and our President.
12:57 AM on 09/12/2009
Thank God the thieves didn't get the Leroy Nieman masterpieces, also!

Folks, if it's art about athletes, it's automatically special-interest kitsch. Better investment is to put your money into old bubble gum cards, which have a verifiable track record.

Notice the guy didn't get $3mil when he tried to unload them in 2002. Silkscreens are guaranteed multiples, unlike paintings. They're just theoretically-limited prints. You can probably find the same stuff on the walls of any upscale sports bar.

At least they aren't "Giclee" prints, which are output from ink-jet printers, and could be produced in thousands. Silk screen stencils wear out, eventually.
06:08 AM on 09/12/2009
JimBozo-
thanks for a good laugh.
He should also check to see if his Peter Max limited editions are still where he left them.

I know the Warhol serigraph market fairly well, having sold a few out of my collection recently, and know for certain that 3 mil for the 'Athletes' portfolio is insanely high. It has always been a dog of a suite, very much derided, and only the Ali one has any real value (and just barely) and maybe the OJ Simpson one (for the macabre collector)

Max. value for the ten pieces is approx 400k. and that's being very very generous. The real tip off that somethings just not quite right here though is that he set the reward at 1 mil, which is ridiculous--a reward fee is usually 10% of value, which even with the overinflated value he places on the suite comes to 30k. Fishy fishy,

No one would pay that in this market anyway, which would indicate an inside job theft.

Anyone can look at the suite and see what a t urd it is. Warhol was a crappy artist when he didn't like the subject matter, and this suite is a prime example of late 70's Warhol schlock art. It wasn't until the early 80's that he started to care about his painting again.

What is curious is that his house was filled with some good art, incl several Picasso paintings (not limited edition silkscreens) yet they were left untouched. Hmmm....
09:13 AM on 09/12/2009
300k
07:44 AM on 09/12/2009
I hope his precious Thomas Kincaid paintings were safe.
09:14 AM on 09/12/2009
Thems paintins look like they glow!
12:09 AM on 09/12/2009
And why exactly did the nanny have to go to the neighbor's to call the police?
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YeWight
04:44 AM on 09/12/2009
See, it's kinda complicated. Nanny's cousin worked for a plumber whose wife drives a maroon van which had been missing since the time her (nanny's) step-daughter ran away with the plumbers wife (it's Kalifawnya)...
06:16 AM on 09/12/2009
at first I thought that too, but then I remembered...

When I was growing up, we had a maid that came everyday even if we were not home...and my father always said if something seemed out of place or wrong leave right away (incase they were still in the house) and get help, go to the neighbors and use their phone because you dont want to touch a thing, especially a phone because who knows if the phone rang and they picked it up for a second and then hung up...

It was smart to go to the neighbors and not touch anything...
09:14 AM on 09/12/2009
Because the intruder could still be in the home.
11:45 PM on 09/11/2009
Why not help the police and link to a legible image of the crime alert flyer?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zen0469
An empty micro-bio is a happy micro-bio.
11:43 PM on 09/11/2009
Where's Bernie? Anybody seen Bernie?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ObamAtomic
10:10 PM on 09/11/2009
What worries Holder and his attorneys,the FBI are man haunting the culprits,
anyways Mr Bradley is free of prosecution.
09:44 PM on 09/11/2009
How much is the insurance coverage?
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James Shanks
09:30 PM on 09/11/2009
I wonder if O.J. Simpson had anything to do with it.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
09:59 PM on 09/11/2009
Oh no you didn't
06:18 AM on 09/12/2009
OH yes he did!!! mmmmmmhhhhmmmmm