<$BlogRSDUrl$>

Monday, November 28, 2005


Be careful.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

FBI names top 10 world art crimes

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation has identified what it has called the top 10 art crimes worldwide.

The FBI's list of stolen artworks includes paintings by Edvard Munch and Benevenuto Cellini, as well as thousands of items missing in Iraq.

The decision to set up an FBI Art Crimes Team in November 2004 was in part an acknowledgement of the obvious - that art crime is now big business.

By one estimation, transactions of $1bn to $2bn take place annually.

Compiled to mark the eight-strong team's first year in existence, the list shows what it is most interested in tracking down.


FBI TOP 10 ART CRIMES

From 7,000 to 10,000 looted and stolen Iraqi artifacts, 2003

12 paintings stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 1990

Two Renoirs and one Rembrandt from Sweden's National Museum, 2000 (two recovered)

Munch's The Scream and The Madonna from the Munch Museum in Oslo, 2004

Benevenuto Cellini Salt Cellar from Vienna's Kunsthistorisches Museum, 2003

Caravaggio's Nativity with San Lorenzo and San Francesco from Palermo, 1969

Davidoff-Morini Stradivarius violin from a New York apartment, 1995

Two Van Gogh paintings from Amsterdam's Vincent Van Gogh Museum, 2002

Cezanne's View of Auvers-sur-Oise from Oxford's Ashmolean Museum, 1999

Leonardo's Madonna with the Yarnwinder from Scotland's Drumlanrig Castle, 2003


The FBI is not saying the items are necessarily in the US - although it is likely some of them are.
They range from a Stradivarius violin stolen from an apartment in New York a decade ago to Cezanne's View of Auvers-sur-Oise, taken from the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford in 1999.

The list also includes the world-famous Edvard Munch painting The Scream, stolen in Oslo last year.

Although this list is dominated by paintings, the politics behind setting up the Art Crime Team had more to do with the theft of and international traffic in historical artifacts.

Thousands of items were looted in Iraq following the US-led invasion, and Washington has been under pressure to track down at least some of them.

Tightening the system of checking what the art world calls the "provenance" of items for sale in Europe and the US has helped a bit - but there are still many items missing.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005


Jesus of the Week.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?