Showing posts with label Henri Matisse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henri Matisse. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Portrait of Christopher Marinello, Director of Art Recovery International. by Travis Simpkins

Christopher Marinello, 2015. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Christopher A. Marinello, Esq.
Lawyer, Founder and CEO of
Art Recovery International
and
Art Recovery Group Ltd.
by Travis Simpkins



Christopher Marinello: The Recovery of Stolen Nazi Art


For more info, please visit:


Christopher Marinello. by Travis Simpkins. Recovered Matisse

Thursday, October 30, 2014

“La pastorale” by Henri Matisse: Stolen on May 20, 2010

Henri Matisse. La pastorale. Stolen, 2010. by Travis Simpkins


La pastorale” by Henri Matisse: Stolen on May 20, 2010
by Travis Simpkins

The Painting:

     Bold use of high-keyed color and undisguised brushwork take precedence over any representational fidelities, making Henri Matisse's La pastorale a prime example of Fauvism. With vibrant colors, applied directly from the tube, Matisse depicts nude figures reclining in the foreground of a pulsing landscape. The picture was painted in 1905, at the height of the short-lived artistic movement, which ran between 1904 and 1908. The loose group of Les Fauves or “the wild beasts” had three exhibitions together, displaying their resolute visual departure from traditional practices.

The Theft:

     On May 20, 2010, a lone thief pulled off one of the biggest art thefts in history. Five works, valued at upwards of €100m, were stolen from the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris. The filched paintings were well-known works by top-tier artists: Picasso, Modigliani, Matisse, Leger and Braque.
     Lax security and careless blunders were largely to blame for the success of the heist. It was discovered that the paintings were gone around 7:00 a.m. The three guards on duty that night were dumbfounded, telling investigators that they “saw nothing.” A closer look at the museum's security system and the events of that shift painted an unsettling picture. Inspection of the security alarms revealed that the motion detectors that covered the area in which the theft took place had been non-functional for nearly two months, since March 30. The alarms points were malfunctioning, causing false alarms, and the management decided to disable them to alleviate their frustration. Spare parts to make repairs had been ordered, but had not arrived yet.
     On the night of May 20, all of the exterior CCTV cameras were focused towards the roof of the building, leaving the guards blind to street level activity. At about 4:00 a.m., the thief sheared a padlock and smashed through a first floor window to gain entry to the Musée d'Art Moderne. Once inside, the masked “burly” thief passed by an array of interior CCTV cameras, which nicely recorded his nonchalant movements as he perpetrated the crime. The thief spent about 15 minutes removing the five canvases from their frames, and he placed them all together in a large single bundle before exiting from the same window. French investigators theorize that the guards were sleeping, or otherwise distracted, in order to have missed the entire crime playing out on their monitors. The Brigade de Répression du Banditisme believes that the thief acted alone.
     In 2011, a suspect told police that he had thrown the five paintings in the garbage and that they were destroyed by a trash compactor. However, this claim is unsubstantiated.

     The five masterpieces are unsellable and have not been recovered.


Police investigate the 2010 Paris Museum of Modern Art Heist

The 5 works stolen from the Museum of Modern Art in Paris