Showing posts with label Rembrandt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rembrandt. Show all posts

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins
Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Dr. Ernst van de Wetering
Professor Emeritus at the University of Amsterdam
Chair of the Rembrandt Research Project (RRP)
by Travis Simpkins



Ernst van de Wetering


For more info, please visit:


Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins
Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins
Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Dr. Ernst van de Wetering
Professor Emeritus at the University of Amsterdam
Chair of the Rembrandt Research Project (RRP)
by Travis Simpkins



Ernst van de Wetering


For more info, please visit:


Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins
Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Saturday, February 13, 2021

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Dr. Ernst van de Wetering
Professor Emeritus at the University of Amsterdam
Chair of the Rembrandt Research Project (RRP)
by Travis Simpkins



Ernst van de Wetering


For more info, please visit:


Ernst van de Wetering. Rembrandt Research Project. RRP. by Travis Simpkins

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Tom Mashberg, New York Times Journalist. Co-Author of "Stealing Rembrandts." by Travis Simpkins

Tom Mashberg. The New York Times. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Tom Mashberg
Journalist / Author
Investigative Reporter for The New York Times
former Sunday editor for the Boston Herald
by Travis Simpkins



Tom Mashberg in "Stolen": Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum


For more info, please visit:


Tom Mashberg. by Travis Simpkins. Stealing Rembrandts

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Waldemar Januszczak, Art Critic & Historian. by Travis Simpkins

Waldemar Januszczak, 2015. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Waldemar Januszczak
Art Critic for The Sunday Times
by Travis Simpkins



Waldemar Januszczak- Every Picture Tells a Story:
Rembrandt- The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp


For more info, please visit:


Waldemar Januszczak, Travis Simpkins. Rembrandt, Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp

Saturday, May 30, 2015

Robert K. Wittman and a Stolen Rembrandt. 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. Self Portrait, Rembrandt

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Tom Mashberg, Reporter for The New York Times. by Travis Simpkins

Tom Mashberg, 2015. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Tom Mashberg
Journalist / Author
Investigative Reporter for The New York Times
former Sunday editor for the Boston Herald
by Travis Simpkins



Tom Mashberg in "Stolen": Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum


For more info, please visit:


Tom Mashberg. by Travis Simpkins. Storm on the Sea of Galilee, Rembrandt

Thursday, January 29, 2015

"The Rembrandt Affair" by Daniel Silva



"The Rembrandt Affair" by Daniel Silva
Putnam Publishers, 2010
Review by Travis Simpkins

     In The Rembrandt Affair, the tenth installment in the Gabriel Allon series of Espionage/Art Crime novels, author Daniel Silva delivers a tour-de-force of research and storytelling. A priceless long-lost portrait by Rembrandt has been stolen, and the art restorer to which it was trusted was murdered during the theft. Although retired from the Office, Israeli Special Agent Gabriel Allon is called upon to aid in the search for the missing masterpiece. Reluctant at first, Gabriel Allon's fascination with the case turns to obsession as the dirty details and secrets regarding the painting's history come to light. Stolen from Holocaust victims by a ruthless Nazi during World War II, held by a Swiss bank during the post-war hideout and possessing a devastating secret in it's relined canvas, the Rembrandt painting has ties to one of the most horrific genocides in human history... and it holds a key that could destroy one of the world's most prominent businessmen, a seemingly-venerable man who has hidden ties to one of the modern world's biggest terrorist threats. It is a painting so dangerous that men are willing to kill for it. From Cornwall to Paris, Holland, Argentina and Lake Geneva, the fast-paced events play out in entertaining and intriguing fashion, conjured up on the yellow legal-pad of Daniel Silva. Gabriel Allon remains one of the great characters and paradoxes in modern fiction, possessing both the gentleness to lovingly restore fragile paintings, and the brutality to kill targets at will (with his bare hands, if need be). Interesting characters abound in the book, including the beautiful Zoe Reed, a British reporter that gets pulled into the fiasco. Although the events, characters and associations are fictional, some obvious parallels can be found in reality. Silva invented the long-lost Rembrandt, but admits that if the painting existed, it would look like Rembrandt's "Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels," which resides in London's National Gallery. The villain in the book, Martin Landesmann, bears more than a passing resemblance to Bernie Madoff (who was embroiled in scandal at the time). The book mentions a "Rembrandt Committee" which seems to allude to Ernst van de Wetering's Rembrandt Research Project (RRP). The book is well-written, without a doubt, but one of it's greatest virtues rests with the research and attention to detail that Silva assigns to the subject. The Rembrandt Affair is a wonderful effort all-around, one of the best in the Gabriel Allon series, and is well worth the time spent reading it.

Portrait of Hendrickje Stoffels, by Rembrandt: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva on The Today Show: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

The Rembrandt Affair in foreign markets: The Rembrandt Affair. Daniel Silva

The Rembrandt Affair by Daniel Silva


Daniel Silva on "The Today Show" : The Rembrandt Affair


Thursday, December 11, 2014

"The Art of the Heist" by Myles Connor

Myles Connor "The Art of the Heist"

The Art of the Heist, by Myles J. Connor Jr.
Harper-Collins, 2010

Brief Review by Travis Simpkins

     The name Myles Connor has become interlinked with Art Heists. Famously brazen and daring, Connor stole priceless works from museums and private residences, including a Rembrandt and paintings by N.C. Wyeth, over a decades-long criminal career. In The Art of the Heist (2010), Myles Connor recounts his turbulent and troubled life with the assistance of author Jenny Siler. Disclaimer: If you are looking strictly for an Art Heist book, you may want to look further, as about 80% of the material in this book is unrelated to Art Crime… but is fascinating nevertheless. Connor details his exploits as an up-and-coming Rock & Roll performer in the 1960's, his early criminal exploits and misdeeds, a successful escape from prison using a fake gun carved from a bar of soap, his overturned rape case, several bank robberies and a double-murder conviction and subsequent acquittal of the heinous crime. There is also much space given to his criminal friendships and dealings in the prison system. Through much of the text, Connor offers few excuses and little remorse for his crimes. The all-too-brief Art Theft sections, which undoubtedly are the main selling points of the book, are interesting and offer insights into the thinking and planning process behind the thefts. Details are presented about how Connor burglarized the Woolworth Estate in Maine, stole a truckload of art and antiques, and was later caught by the FBI after trying to sell paintings by N.C. Wyeth taken during the theft. Myles Connor's most famous art heist, however, occurred on April 14,1975... when he ripped a million-dollar Rembrandt portrait off the wall of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and ran like hell to a waiting getaway car, fighting off a tough elderly security guard, aided by armed accomplices. Connor later struck a deal to return the Rembrandt, using the painting as a bargaining tool to have a pending prison sentence reduced. This established a grim precedent of bartering the return of art for leniency on criminal acts that would be utilized by other criminals in subsequent years. Towards the end of the narrative, Connor discusses his role in the infamous 1990 Heist at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum: an as yet unsolved crime during which 13 masterpieces were stolen, including a Vermeer and three Rembrandts. According to Connor, who was in prison at the time of the heist, he had planned on robbing the Gardner Museum years before. He cased the building and chose what he wanted to steal, but did not get around to it. Myles Connor claims that associates of his, Bobby Donati and David Houghton, were responsible for robbing the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. However, both Donati and Houghton are dead now, and (as the book's text will illustrate) Connor has a propensity for fabrication. So, if taken for what it is, Myles Connor's memoir is a grandstanding yet intriguing true-crime tale, certainly worth the time spent reading it.



Myles Connor

Myles Connor with a soap gun used to break out of prison

The MFA Stolen Rembrandt and Myles Connor

Myles Connor mugshot

The Rembrandt stolen from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston by Myles Connor

Myles Connor

The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

The Gardner Heist, Stolen Rembrandt

Persons of Interest- the 1990 Gardner Museum Heist

Myles Connor with a sword (Photo: Charles Sabba)

Myles Connor "The Art of the Heist"

Myles Connor "The Art of the Heist"

Myles Connor

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Anthony Amore and Rembrandt's Storm on the Sea of Galilee

Anthony Amore, by Travis Simpkins. The Storm on the Sea of Galilee, by Rembrandt

Anthony Amore
Chief Investigator and Director of Security 
at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. 
by Travis Simpkins. 
and 
The Storm on the Sea of Galilee
by Rembrandt. 
Stolen on March 18, 1990


To report information on the Gardner Museum theft, 
contact Anthony Amore by email at:




Monday, September 8, 2014

Incognito (1997): Forging a Rembrandt on Film


     Directed by John Badham, Incognito (1998) is a much better film than it is often given credit for. Relegated to direct DVD release in most markets, the film is both exciting and intriguing. Of particular note are the highly detailed scenes depicting the steps an art forger takes in reproducing a "Rembrandt" from start to finish. The artists who created the drawings and paintings for the film did an admirable job. The cast is good as well, including Jason Patric, Rod Steiger, Irene Jacob and Ian Holm.

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt

Incognito. 1997 Movie: Forging a Rembrandt


"Incognito"- movie trailer 


Friday, July 25, 2014

Rembrandt (1936): Charles Laughton as the Dutch Old Master


     Directed by Alexander Korda, Rembrandt (1936) takes a cinematically biographical look at the troubled life and artistic career of Rembrandt van Rijn. The focus is placed on drama over process, but is an enjoyable portrait of the Dutch Old Master in 17th Century Holland. Charles Laughton is excellent as Rembrandt. Laughton's real-life spouse, Elsa Lanchester, is wonderful and beautiful as Hendrickje Stoffels. Overall, a great production.

Charles Laughton

Charles Laughton

Charles Laughton

The Night Watch

Charles Laughton

Elsa Lanchester

Elsa Lanchester

Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester

Elsa Lanchester

Charles Laughton

Elsa Lanchester

Charles Laughton


"Rembrandt"- promo