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Why It's So Popular to Steal a Rembrandt

One Rembrandt has been stolen four times, from the same museum

By Sarah Whitmire,  Newser Staff

Posted Jul 17, 2011 3:05 PM CDT

(Newser) – It's a fascinating art-world contradiction: Paintings by Rembrandt have been stolen time and time again over the years—but they aren't worth as much as, say, a Van Gogh, and most are so recognizable that the purloiners can't sell them anyway. In Stealing Rembrandts, art security pro Anthony Amore and journalist Tom Mashberg recount a handful of major thefts: the painting that was stolen four times from the same museum; the security guard who died trying to stop the crime; the thief who got his hands one by way of scaffolding set up by workers who were installing ... a security system.

But Amore and Mashberg also try to tackle the million-dollar question: Why Rembrandts? They're not secretly hanging on the walls of rich and devious international art lovers, the pair argue. In fact, the majority of stolen Rembrandts end up being returned. Sometimes the paintings are used in an attempt to gain a ransom payment, but many Rembrandt thieves probably just don’t know enough about art to know that their crime probably won't pay off, they write. The Christian Science Monitor declares it a "concise" and "entertaining" read. (Click to read about an odd twist in a recent Picasso theft.)

Rembrandt's 1633 painting The Storm on the Sea of Galilee
Rembrandt's 1633 painting "The Storm on the Sea of Galilee"   (Wikipedia)
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COMMENTS
Showing 3 of 4 comments
guvner
Jul 17, 2011 11:01 PM CDT
I heard these guys interviewed on a local radio station. They're actually pretty funny. One of them mentioned that if you *really* wanted to steal a painting of worth, go for a Vermeer. Whereas Rembrandt's paintings number in the many hundreds with even more drawings, Vermeer did only a few dozen.
MisterSamsonite
Jul 17, 2011 7:41 PM CDT
How is finding a bunch of stolen art in the home of an art thief an "odd twist"? I'm totally fine with Newser linking to other articles of theirs, but please don't exaggerate just to get hits.
finkster
Jul 17, 2011 3:53 PM CDT
Smart thieves will steal a painting that a buyer has already requested.
 

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