Showing posts with label Norman Rockwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norman Rockwell. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Portrait of Robert K. Wittman, Founder of the FBI Art Crime Team. by Travis Simpkins

Robert K. Wittman, 2014. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of 
Robert K. Wittman 
Founder, FBI Art Crime Team 
by Travis Simpkins


Robert K. Wittman interview:


For more info, please visit:


Robert K. Wittman. by Travis Simpkins. Spirit of 1976, Norman Rockwell

Thursday, February 19, 2015

"The Rockwell Heist" by Bruce Rubenstein


"The Rockwell Heist" by Bruce Rubenstein
Borealis, 2013
Review by Travis Simpkins

     On the cold winter night of February 16, 1978, seven works by Norman Rockwell and a fake Renoir were stolen from Elayne Galleries in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. Twenty-two years later, the stolen Rockwell paintings were recovered half-a-world and a climate-shift away at a remote villa in rural Brazil. The Rockwell masterworks were Date/Cowgirl & Cowboy, The Spirit of 1976, No Swimming, Summer, Winter and She's My Baby. The phony Renoir (which seemingly was the main target of the heist) has never resurfaced. In his 2013 book, The Rockwell Heist, Bruce Rubenstein offers a concise look at the journey taken by the paintings after the theft: from the midwest, through Europe, to South America and back again. At just 178 pages, the book sticks to the known facts without added conjecture or flair (with the exception of a tangent about Martin Cahill and his 1986 Russborough House heist). 
     During the initial 1978 investigation of the theft at Elayne Galleries, a few possible scenarios and schemes were explored by the FBI… with the most likely case involving the owner of the fake Renoir (in a roundabout way). Buddy Verson had purchased his "Renoir" for $15,000 in a transaction with a crooked conman in Miami. When Verson loaned his new acquisition to Elayne Galleries, it is theorized that the crooks (with the aid of midwestern hired thieves) plotted to steal the fake Renoir back, and in the process, also took advantage of the opportunity to take the paintings from the Norman Rockwell exhibit. The paintings vanished. Gallery owner Elayne Lindberg and her daughter, Bonnie, stayed on the case after the authorities had given up. They received many tips over the years, but made little headway. The stolen works traveled to Miami, then turned up in Portugal by the late 1980's. Because the demand for Rockwell's work is low in Europe, the works were smuggled back to the Americas, and were caught by Brazilian customs in the 1990's. Through some legal finagling, the Rockwell paintings were legally purchased by a Brazilian art dealer and schoolmaster named Jose Carniero. Poor interrelations and lack of extradition between the United States and Brazil would prove troublesome. 
     Both Bonnie Lindberg and FBI Art Crime Team founder Robert K. Wittman were instrumental in retrieving the stolen Rockwell masterpieces in 2000 and 2001, and both are heroes in the tale. Jose Carniero wanted to do "the right thing" for the right price, and initiated contact with Lindberg in an effort to sell the paintings back to her. The Cowgirl/Cowboy paintings were recovered in this initial compromise. Robert K. Wittman utilized the heightened sense of patriotism following the 9-11 attacks to gain force in recovering the remaining quintessentially-American Rockwell works (The Spirit of 1976 includes a likeness of the twin towers of the World Trade Center). Diplomacy, loopholes and negotiations proved fruitful in this circuitous journey that enjoyed a mostly happy ending. As previously mentioned, this book is short and tends to focus on the Lindberg's side of the story. For added information about the valiant efforts of Bob Wittman regarding this case, read his thoroughly entertaining memoir, Priceless: How I Went Undercover to Rescue the World's Stolen Treasures.

: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Before the Date by Norman Rockwell: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Art Theft: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

She's My Baby by Norman Rockwell: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Bonnie Lindberg: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Spirit of '76 by Norman Rockwell: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Robert K. Wittman: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

The "Date" paintings recovered: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Robert K. Wittman: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

FBI and the recovered Rockwell paintings: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Norman Rockwell: The Rockwell Heist. Bruce Rubenstein

Friday, November 28, 2014

"The Nightwatchman", 1962. by Norman Rockwell on View at the Worcester Art Museum

The Nightwatchman, 1962. by Norman Rockwell. Worcester Art Museum

by Travis Simpkins

     In 1962, Norman Rockwell was commissioned to paint yet another cover for the Saturday Evening Post. This illustration was to depict a nonchalant late shift security guard at a museum. For a museum, Rockwell chose the Higgins Armory Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts as inspiration. Containing the second largest collection of arms and armor in North America, the Higgins was utterly unique, with a great hall built to represent an interior castle setting. Norman Rockwell visited the Higgins Armory Museum, took reference photos and met with staff. Back home in Stockbridge, he executed an enormous charcoal preparatory sketch for the finished work to be called "The Nightwatchman." The drawing depicts a late shift security guard amongst a display of arms and armor, perhaps just having awoken from a quick doze, pouring himself a cup of coffee and preparing to enjoy a meal break. His watchman's signal clock casually hangs on the ironclad foot of the display armor. It certainly recalls a simpler time in museum security… a line of work, that despite parody, has long held a certain mystique. To be in an empty museum at night is an indescribable feeling… especially if one possesses an interest in history. This illustration, "The Nightwatchman", sums up some of that… anchored by a collection established during the golden age of American museums. 

The Nightwatchman, 1962. by Norman Rockwell. Worcester Art Museum

The Nightwatchman, 1962. by Norman Rockwell. Worcester Art Museum

     On a related note, there is still one Watchman's Signal left at the Worcester Art Museum. It has been out of service for decades, but recalls the old practice of stopping in at regular stations that would've been employed by Rockwell's "Nightwatchman." It is fitting that the drawing of the Security Guard, along with much of the armor, came to the nearby Worcester Art Museum when the Higgins Armory Museum closed in 2013. 

Old Watchman's Signal