More

Lone Thief Pulls Mega-Heist In Paris Art Museum (VIDEO)

First Posted: 05/20/10 10:08 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:30 PM ET

Art Heist
Police officers search for clues as they pack up the frames of the stolen paintings outside the Paris Museum of Modern Art, following the report of five paintings having been stolen, Thursday May 20, 2010. Police and prosecutors say a lone thief has stolen five paintings worth a total of Euros 500 million ($613 million), including works by Picasso and Matisse and Modigliani.

(ANGELA CHARLTON, AP) PARIS — A thief stole five paintings possibly worth hundreds of millions of euros, including major works by Picasso and Matisse, in a brazen overnight heist at a Paris modern art museum, police and prosecutors said Thursday.

The paintings disappeared early Thursday from the Paris Museum of Modern Art, across the Seine River from the Eiffel Tower in one of the French capital's most chic and tourist-frequented neighborhoods.

The museum's security system, including some of the surveillance cameras, had been broken for the past few days, according to a police official. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is under way.

Christophe Girard, deputy culture secretary at Paris City Hall, confirmed that the security system was disabled at the time of the theft, and said a single masked intruder was caught on a video surveillance camera.

Investigators are trying to determine whether the intruder was operating alone, Girard told reporters, who suggested the heist was carried out by a very "sophisticated" team or individual. He said three guards were on duty overnight but "they saw nothing."

The intruder entered by cutting a padlock on a gate and breaking a museum window, the Paris prosecutor's office said.

The prosecutor's office initially estimated the five paintings' total worth at as much as euro500 million ($613 million).


WATCH:

Girard, however, said the total value was "just under 100 million euros."

He said "Le pigeon aux petits-pois" (The Pigeon with the Peas) an ochre and brown Cubist oil painting by Pablo Picasso, was worth an estimated euro23 million, and "La Pastorale" (Pastoral), an oil painting of nudes on a hillside by Henri Matisse about euro15 million.

The other paintings stolen were "L'olivier pres de l'Estaque" (Olive Tree near Estaque) by Georges Braque; "La femme a l'eventail" (Woman with a Fan) by Amedeo Modigliani; and "Nature morte aux chandeliers" (Still Life with Chandeliers) by Fernand Leger.

Alice Farren-Bradley of the Art Loss Registry in London said the Paris theft "appears to be one of the biggest" art heists ever, considering the estimated value, the prominence of the artists and the high profile of the museum.

She added, however, that the value of the paintings would have to be confirmed, as museums and art dealers often value paintings differently.

She said it will be "virtually impossible" to sell such prominent paintings on the open market and that typically, stolen art fetches lower prices on the black market.

"Very often they can be used as collateral to broker other deals" involving drugs or weapons, she said. "They are not necessarily going to be bought by some great lover of the arts."

While the thefts are often carefully planned, that's not always the case for the next step – selling the stolen paintings – which is why they are often recovered, she said.

Interpol is alerting its national bureaus around the world to the theft.

"This is a big theft, that is very clear," Stephane Thefo, a specialist at Interpol who handles international art theft investigation, told The Associated Press. "These works are of an inestimable value."

He expressed doubt that one person could have pulled off the theft alone, even if only one person was caught on camera.

Red-and-white tape surrounded the museum, and paper signs on the museum doors said it was closed for technical reasons.

On a cordoned-off balcony behind the museum, police in blue gloves and face masks examined the broken window and empty frames. The paintings appeared to have been carefully removed from the disassembled frames, not sliced out.

A security guard at the museum said the paintings were discovered missing by a night watchman just before 7 a.m. (0500 GMT, 1 a.m. Thursday EDT). The guard was not authorized to be publicly named because of museum policy.

Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe said in a statement that he was "saddened and shocked by this theft, which is an intolerable attack on Paris' universal cultural heritage."

The director of the neighboring modern art museum Palais de Tokyo, Pierre Cornette de Saint-Cyr, called the thief or thieves "fools."

"You cannot do anything with these paintings. All countries in the world are aware, and no collector is stupid enough to buy a painting that, one, he can't show to other collectors, and two, risks sending him to prison," he said on LCI television.

"In general, you find these paintings," he said. "These five paintings are un-sellable, so thieves, sirs, you are imbeciles, now return them."

Flemming Friborg, manager of Copenhagen's Glyptotek museum – known for its Impressionist paintings, among others – called the theft of the high-caliber paintings "like the death of a family member."

___

Associated Press writers Christina Okello, Greg Keller and Nicolas Garriga in Paris and Karl Ritter in Stockholm and Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

(ANGELA CHARLTON, AP) PARIS — A thief stole five paintings possibly worth hundreds of millions of euros, including major works by Picasso and Matisse, in a brazen overnight heist at a Paris mode...
(ANGELA CHARLTON, AP) PARIS — A thief stole five paintings possibly worth hundreds of millions of euros, including major works by Picasso and Matisse, in a brazen overnight heist at a Paris mode...
Filed by Alex Leo  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 103
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
02:47 PM on 05/26/2010
Me. too. When I have 80,000,000 euros laying around my house, I also forget to lock the doors.
I find "Door is closed" sign is sufficient security.
01:37 PM on 05/25/2010
that's what you get for being cheap on security. nice one.
05:10 AM on 05/24/2010
The kind of art we are talking about is essentially status symbols and financial investments for the moneyed elite, AKA a form of art that should die and make room for new ideas. The fact that these paintings are now gone (from a building but not public record) is really irrelevant to, well just about everyone on this planet. The art world is about status and money, so let them lose both.

Kudos to the thief, I hope he gets rich on these artifacts, which represent nothing but an elitist, bourgeois pastime. I suggest if you want to see a Picasso, look for it online. All you are missing is the pseudo-religious mystique of `the original.`
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kalital
12:26 PM on 05/24/2010
Oh, so it's better in some person's private collection than in a Museum where everyone can see it? You're cheering a guy who steals art from the people? And anyone who thinks there's no difference between an original Picasso painting and a reproduction just doesn't have very good eyes. Sheesh.
photo
MorpheusXNYC
Web/graphic designer and former freelance writer
10:52 AM on 05/25/2010
I completely agree, and mind you, I'm an artist myself.

I'm asking for a little perspective here. For too long, the world has been too wrapped up in status symbols and prestige aka "esteem amongst strangers" - a pointless pursuit of the wealthy bourgeoisie.

Maybe its's because as an artist, I simply see my creations as outward expressions of my inner self - a thought, a concept or an emotion crystallized into physical form, rather than as a commodity for some wealthy,pretentious, ascot wearing Wall Street type to hang on a wall to impress other snobs like some menagerie filled with a snapshots of artists' souls.

So, though I'm not cheering on the theft nor the thief, I think that given the real problems that the remaining 95% of humanity struggling to survive, carve out a decent life and a brighter future for themselves face, especially in this global economic crisis, the theft of a few paintings is utterly and comically irrelevant.
04:56 AM on 05/24/2010
More power to this guy. Art as a status symbol for the rich and as a financial investment is bullshit and should be stol
11:41 AM on 05/25/2010
So it should be sold to a millionaire for his/her private enjoyment, rather than being in a museum open to the public?
06:24 PM on 05/23/2010
o.k. just checked; nothing showing up yet on dubai.craigslist.org
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
padrushka
question authority
04:19 AM on 05/23/2010
the most interesting item on hp today.
after reading the laurel and hardy american news that seems to be more bizarre with each passing day and can it get weirder??
i have to admit, this was fun. a padlock and window..te he
12:46 PM on 05/22/2010
What really bothers me about these thieves is not that they steal the work but that they butcher the paintng by cutting it out of the frames and reducing the image each time it gets stolen.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zxrod
Why don't you?
03:47 PM on 05/24/2010
"The paintings appeared to have been carefully removed from the disassembled frames, not sliced out."
No reason to be really bothered then I suppose ;)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
04:04 AM on 05/22/2010
Yeah the thieves are such imbeciles, they'll probably sell them back to the insurance underwriters for 10-15 million in such a depressed market.

Real fools.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:41 PM on 05/21/2010
Personally, if I owned "a Picasso" I would almost pay someone to take it away.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:47 AM on 05/22/2010
I am so embarrassed for you - do you serve on the Austin School Board?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:26 AM on 05/22/2010
You, 3dtrix, of all people, should know that Austin, Texas is one of THE hearts of higher consciousness in this country. Robert Earl Keen? Austin City Limits? Lyle Lovett?

Don't use Austin as a bad example of Texas. There is a pipeline between here and there, and it includes KPIG. And consider that, in the middle of TEXAS, that's where Whole Foods got its start.

Houston, on the other hand....that's where Monkey McUnibrow, the former Resident of the Very Very White House, lives. And even Houstonians are not that bad. Texas would be cool except for the fringe element of oil and stupidity. Ask Molly Ivins, if you can get her on the Ouija board. Or ask Jim Hightower, twice elected Texas Agriculture Commissioner. He's still alive.

http://www.jimhightower.com/jim

And to ThinkB4USpeak: please pay me to take your Picasso away. I'll split it with you and let you buy some Dogs Playing Poker or a Thomas "Dimmer Switchy" Kinkade for your rec room.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:23 AM on 05/22/2010
Well, no, but I paint and draw a bit, and can see with my own eyes, the difference between a work of Art and some crap from a self-serving hack.
12:43 PM on 05/22/2010
A friend of mine gave me a book on Picasso's drawings, and I would pull it out after a late nite of drinking and go on about how it was crap, but a funny thing happened, the more I showed it the more I started to like the drawings and now I see the wimsical attitude of the work, and the almost zen like cartooning of the drawings.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:28 PM on 05/22/2010
Didn't say I didn't like some of it; just saying compared to Degas and Ingres, it's a huge body of crap.
07:23 PM on 05/21/2010
these cases always baffle me because ok....they're worth $613 million but who on earth is going to buy them and how could you possibly trust any buyer? maybe the buyer was set up in advance, who knows but it's a crazy risk for something that's very difficult to move...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
04:08 AM on 05/22/2010
The buyer will be the insurance underwriter and they will pay many millions to get them back and not pay the market value.
12:03 PM on 05/22/2010
Interesting... But wouldn't the authorities ask them where they got paintings that have knowingly been stolen?
02:22 PM on 05/21/2010
Good thing he did not get any of the 'paint by number' pieces.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Sock De Jour
Democracy is an illusion
02:42 PM on 05/21/2010
Those are safe and sound. In tract homes throughout Dumbfuckistan.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:22 PM on 05/21/2010
Now, THAT was funny. Suprised it got through. Maybe I can get another sock and fan you again.
10:53 AM on 05/21/2010
Definitely an inside job.
08:49 AM on 05/21/2010
Maybe calling the thieves "imbeciles" is not the best idea especially when you've got cubist egg on your face.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
10:42 AM on 05/21/2010
He didnt want to call the thief a "mastermind" for fear of depressing the morale of the surete.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lozange
Aiming around wondrously
05:37 AM on 05/21/2010
Breaking a window!? Sophisticated? A security system broken for a FEW days? It's the museum that's amateur!!!
photo
Republitarian
I own US corporations.
03:21 AM on 05/21/2010
Ha, only France would have broken security cameras guarding 9 figures worth of art.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AdamWright
03:57 AM on 05/21/2010
The biggest art heist in history was in Boston.
photo
Republitarian
I own US corporations.
04:29 AM on 05/21/2010
I'm guessing it involved more than a broken camera and Inspector Clouseau.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
10:43 AM on 05/21/2010
only america would still have collapsing coal mines powering its electricity.
photo
Republitarian
I own US corporations.
01:47 PM on 05/21/2010
Well you got me on that one. Thank our dumb left who won't allow nuke power like the Frogs.