More

Case Of LA's Stolen Rembrandt Intrigues Art World

By JOHN ROGERS   09/12/11 02:59 PM ET   AP

Stolen Rembrandt

LOS ANGELES -- On the surface it looked like an open-and-shut case: A pair of thieves drop by an art exhibition at the Ritz-Carlton and, while one distracts a curator, the other snatches a valuable, centuries-old Rembrandt drawing and bolts with it.

Apparently finding the small pen-and-ink work by the Dutch master too hot to fence, the thieves have second thoughts. They abandon it, undamaged, at a church on the other side of town.

Then the real mystery begins.

Three weeks after recovering the framed, 11-by-6 inch drawing called "The Judgment," authorities aren't sure whether it really is a Rembrandt or if it even belongs to the art dealer that displayed it with other works at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Marina del Rey.

"They have to show us something to prove that they own it, and they haven't been able to do that," said Steve Whitmore, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. He said authorities are keeping the alleged Rembrandt under lock and key until the ownership issue is resolved.

Officials with the Linearis Institute, which says it owns the work that it values at $250,000, did not respond to phone calls and email messages.

However, the institute's attorney, William Klein, said Linearis purchased "The Judgment," from a legitimate seller. He said the institute's officials just don't want to say who that was.

"Things like that really are trade secrets," Klein told The Associated Press. "We don't believe we need to reveal trade secrets to get back what is ours."

He acknowledged the institute has no trail of paperwork (called provenance in art-world speak) to prove "The Judgment" really is a Rembrandt. But he added that officials at Linearis believe it is and it shouldn't matter what authorities think.

Art appraisers and other experts have said they cannot find "The Judgment" listed in any catalog or database chronicling the works of Rembrandt, who created hundreds of paintings, drawings and etchings before his death in 1669.

The Sheriff's Department is continuing to investigate the theft, although Whitmore said Linearis officials have told authorities they are not interested in having the people who snatched the drawing prosecuted.

"Which I find curious," he said.

Klein said Linearis is most interested at this point in getting its drawing back, although he added that if investigators happen to catch the thieves, "We'd like the Sheriff's Department and the District Attorney's office to do anything they need to do that's in the interests of justice."

Meanwhile, he said he's hoping to work out a compromise that will allow the drawing's return. If he can't he says he'll take the Sheriff's Department to court.

Even in the art world, where questions about who owns what and how they got it arise frequently, the Rembrandt mystery has evoked curiosity.

It's not as unusual as one might think for a low-level thief to drop in on an exhibition and grab something, said Anthony Amore, who is head of security for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and co-author of the book "Stealing Rembrandts."

He noted that just a month before the Rembrandt theft someone walked into a San Francisco art gallery and carried out a $200,000 Picasso. Police quickly arrested a New Jersey man they say has been linked to at least a half-dozen other art thefts since June.

Works by Rembrandt and Picasso are especially popular targets, Amore said, because everybody has heard of those artists and knows their works sell for huge amounts of money. In the last 100 years, he said, at least 81 Rembrandts have been stolen.

What is unusual, Amore continued, is that the institute didn't immediately come forward with documents to get its painting back. He compared it to someone having a high-end car like a Ferrari stolen and, after police recover it, not immediately producing the ownership documents to reclaim it.

"Provenance is the key to authenticating a piece and something like this would have to have some sort of provenance behind it," Amore said of the paperwork tracing a piece's ownership, often back to the time it was created.

"It's not impossible, but it's unusual for an institute, or anybody, to purchase something worth a quarter of a million dollars with no bonafides behind it," he said.

Confirming at this late date if Rembrandt really did the small drawing of a man kneeling before a judge could be difficult but not impossible, said veteran appraiser Mark Winter of Art Experts Inc. of Florida.

Doing so would require a side-by-side comparison of the work with an acknowledged Rembrandt drawing from the same period, as well as a search of Rembrandt books and other documents, which could be scattered all over the world.

Still, he said, every now and then someone confirms something as the artist's work.

For years, he noted, Rembrandt's "Self Portrait with Gorget," which hangs in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg, was thought to be a copy of the artist's work that had been done by a friend. Then, in the 1990s, further study of documents and the painting revealed it was the real deal.

"I do not know the particular history and whereabouts of this drawing," Winter said. "But potentially yes, it is possible it could be by Rembrandt's hand."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST ARTS

Filed by Travis Korte  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 45
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nic the wonder puppy
When life throws lemons, throw them back
03:14 PM on 09/14/2011
It's not in my dog house
g9
conservation ,votes with a brain not a party
07:08 PM on 09/13/2011
the real story is : "nobody knows "
04:45 AM on 09/13/2011
Art is the only business dirtier than politics. Provenance is nothing more than a campaign promise in most cases. If it has never been stolen, misrepresented or desecrated, it can't be art. A lifetime in the business can sum it up in those 3 short sentences.....
mlondeaux
A nation of sheep breeds a government of wolves.
03:26 AM on 09/13/2011
As a sidebar to this story, this year is the 100 year anniversary of the Mona Lisa being stolen from the Louvre in 1911. The mastermind behind the theft was a handyman who had worked at the Louvre hanging paintings. He was caught 28 months later when he tried to sell it. The buyer became suspicious and called the police. What a shock when he answered his door expecting a check to be delivered but instead it was the police. He was sentenced to 8 months in jail.
03:22 AM on 09/13/2011
I live half a kilometer from where Rembrandt went to the Dutch equivilant of elementary school, in Leiden, The Netherlands. I think I'll look around for some of his doodling he did in class.
03:17 AM on 09/13/2011
Didn't Rembrandt sketch them a receipt?
mlondeaux
A nation of sheep breeds a government of wolves.
02:58 AM on 09/13/2011
There must be a Rembrandt expert out there who would know if this piece was originally stolen.....or if it even exists.
01:42 AM on 09/13/2011
Anyone reported this stolen? No !! Then the frigging cops should give it back. Its none of their business where it came from or even if its real or not !!!!!!!!! Amazing how the cops think they can do anything !!!
mlondeaux
A nation of sheep breeds a government of wolves.
03:00 AM on 09/13/2011
What if it really is stolen and the police end up giving it back to the thieves? Then they would be nothing short of the Keystone Cops.
01:38 AM on 09/13/2011
What is my perfect crime? I break into Tiffany's at midnight. Do I go for the vault? No. I go for the chandelier. It's priceless. As I'm taking it down, a woman catches me. She tells me to stop. It's her father's business. She's Tiffany. I say no. We make love all night. In the morning cops come and I escape in one of their uniforms. I tell her to meet me in Mexico, but I go to Canada. I don't trust her. Besides, I like the cold. Thirty years later I get a postcard. I have a son, and he's the chief of police. This is where the story gets interesting: I tell Tiffany to meet me in Paris by the Trocadaro. She's been waiting for me all these years, she's never taken another lover. I don't care, I don't show up. I go to Berlin. That's where I stashed the chandelier.
mlondeaux
A nation of sheep breeds a government of wolves.
02:51 AM on 09/13/2011
You have quite the imagination, expeditor. You should be a writer.
09:39 PM on 09/12/2011
The real story here is that the owner won't show the provenance. They wouldn't have purchased it without one if it was legitimate, so the police are right to be leary of their story. It sounds like it might have been stolen years ago, and Linearis knows it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blbsmurf
08:38 PM on 09/12/2011
They should have stolen Monet to buy Degas to make the Van Gogh.
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
09:24 PM on 09/12/2011
I actually can paint like Monet, Degas, Vincent Van Gogh, or Rembrandt. The photo looks like a drawing used as an underlayment for a painting. Most use a coating called Gesso which can be tested by experts for circa ( era date) as well as the paper or canvas. Amazingly, of the 2,000 plus pieces that Van Gogh created, some are worth as much as 500 milion dollars and in total almost 2 trillion dollars ($2,000,000,000,000.00) in value, yet he's buried next to his brother Theo in a grave marked with a 75 dollar headstone.....Alfred-
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:08 AM on 09/13/2011
Do you sell any of your work and/or do you have a website showing your skills. Would love to see some of your work.,
Al Schrader
Some overnight ideas take decades
06:02 AM on 09/13/2011
To seeker: The last canvas I did was in 1987. The highest commission I ever got was $250.00 It takes about 6 weeks to create a masterpiece (works out to about a dollar an hour). I've been too busy.
I sold or donated all of it except for 3 pieces I use on the walls in my house here in Florida. I think there are still a couple of my canvases in the 24 Carat Collection in Orlando the rest are in private collections....Alfred-
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:51 AM on 09/13/2011
Cute, I like the way you think
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blbsmurf
10:48 PM on 09/13/2011
I can not take credit as the originator of that joke. I thought I would share it though.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blbsmurf
08:30 PM on 09/12/2011
Why does the law have it? It does not belong to them. Give it back.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
danrothesq
Absolute brilliance
07:58 PM on 09/12/2011
All of you are wrong. The Rembrandt is mine. Tell the police to send it over to me.
06:45 PM on 09/12/2011
This is a case for Gabriel Allon!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:05 AM on 09/13/2011
This is a case for "Monk". He'd have that case solved in 24 hours.
mlondeaux
A nation of sheep breeds a government of wolves.
02:52 AM on 09/13/2011
Columbo would have solved it with more panache!
06:31 PM on 09/12/2011
I think the museum stole it from the professor with the candlestick in the lounge.