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

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Portrait of Sheikha Al Mayassa Al Thani, Chairperson of Qatar Museums. by Travis Simpkins

Sheikha Al Mayassa Al Thani, 2015. by Travis Simpkins


Portrait Sketch of
Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani
Chairperson of Qatar Museums
by Travis Simpkins



Sheikha Al Mayassa Al Thani: Art and Globalization



For more info, please visit:
Sheikha Al-Mayassa Al-Thani has purchased the two most expensive paintings in the world: In 2015, she bought Paul Gauguin's 1892 painting "When will you marry?"for $300,000,000. In 2012, she purchased a version of Paul Cezanne's "The Card Players" for $250,000,000.


Sheikha Al Mayassa Al Thani. by Travis Simpkins. $300 Million Gauguin

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Research: Worcester Art Museum "Then and Now" by Travis Simpkins. Update #41

-September marked one year since the opening of the [remastered] section of the European Galleries at the Worcester Art Museum. In the older 2012 photo, to the right of the doorway, Rembrandt's "Saint Bartholomew" can be seen on display. It was moved one gallery over in the re-design.
-The Rembrandt was one of four paintings stolen from WAM on May 17, 1972. After removing the paintings from the walls and placing them in cloth bags, the two thieves made their way to the Salisbury entrance, where their escape was hindered by a security guard. The thieves shot and critically wounded the guard, who was saved by a visitor with First Aid training. In the photo, the guard, Philip J. Evans poses with the Rembrandt after both he and the painting were recovered.
-The events surrounding the 1972 WAM Heist (and many other thefts) are chronicled in Anthony Amore's book, "Stealing Rembrandts." Anthony's insights and concerns regarding "Saint Bartholomew" are featured on the WAM website, here: worcesterart.org/remastered/saint-bartholomew-rembrandt
-The sketch depicts the 1884 pastel "Portrait of Mademoiselle Manthey" by Paul Gauguin, which was among the works stolen from WAM 42 years ago. (the full text for my post included below).

Remastered. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Philip J. Evans. Security Guard short during 1972 WAM Heist

Stealing Rembrandts. Anthony Amore. Travis Simpkins

Gauguin's Mademoiselle Manthey. Worcester Art Museum. by Travis Simpkins

Paul Gauguin's “Portrait of Mademoiselle Manthey”
: Stolen and Stored Away

A Visual Footnote to the 1972 Worcester Art Museum Heist

by Travis Simpkins

Paul Gauguin's 1884 pastel Portrait of Mademoiselle Manthey has long-held a certain mystique in my eyes. I have worked at the Worcester Art Museum for 16 years, and I've only seen it twice. Like most delicate works on paper, Mademoiselle Manthey rests in storage limbo, seldom presenting herself to public view. There is nothing truly enigmatic about the subject herself: the pretty young daughter of the consul representing Norway and Sweden in Rouen and Le Havre during the 1880's, whose family owned several works by Gauguin. The visual spell cast by the Portrait of Mademoiselle Manthey is contained within it's composition and feel; simple and harmonious. Gauguin's straightforward view catches the young lady's glance in an unguarded moment of daydreaming. The short strokes and vertical hatchings of pure color add depth and implications of texture, and the diagonal breaks of the sloping shoulders and hat brim serve to enliven the picture plane. It is a quiet and elegant masterpiece. However, when Mademoiselle Manthey was targeted by thieves four decades ago, these lovely aesthetic elements received no consideration when calculating it's worth.
The Worcester Art Museum Heist on May 17, 1972 bore no resemblance to the daring robberies presented in Hollywood films. The stolen art was not hand-picked by an art-loving wealthy connoisseur, the aesthetics and beauty of the paintings meant nothing to those taking them, the pieces were not destined for a luxurious villa, there was no stealthy night-time repel through laser beams, the thieves were not sophisticated or clever and their plan did not play out in seamless fashion.
When Florian “Al” Monday, a petty crook and self-styled art enthusiast, selected the four works he planned to steal from the Worcester Art Museum, money was his sole motive. Disregarding his own personal taste (he has a passion for Renoir), Monday selected pieces from the collection that he thought were the most valuable: Rembrandt's Saint Bartholomew, Gauguin's Brooding Woman and Mademoiselle Manthey and Picasso's Mother and Child by a Fountain. He figured that even with a black market value of 10%, he still stood to profit a great deal from selling the filched paintings. The heist was planned for the middle of the day, during open hours. Contrary to what is depicted in the movies, more than half of documented art thefts are committed when museums are open, for the simple fact that the building perimeter has already been breached, clearing the first hurdle of access. Monday's plan was further aided by proximity and convenience, in that all four works were located just one level up from the front door and that the latter two works were small and portable.
On the afternoon of May 17, 1972, Al Monday sent two dim-witted young thieves, in their early 20's, into the Worcester Art Museum with a revolver (loaded with a single bullet). The thieves wore matching blue jackets, with the supposition that they'd appear to be employees when removing the works from the walls. After flirting with two high school girls in the galleries, the young thugs easily bagged the four masterpieces and sauntered towards the exit. When an elderly security guard tried to stop them, they drew their weapon and shot him. Critically wounded, the guard survived thanks to first aid provided by a visitor. The four paintings were driven away in a waiting station wagon (with Gauguin's Brooding Woman ignorantly and precariously placed on the roof rack of the car).
In reality, even if the plan had worked perfectly and no one had been hurt, Monday never stood a chance of selling the well-known stolen paintings. However, with the added charge of shooting the guard, the crime was elevated to a whole new level of scrutiny. Knowing the authorities would be focusing on him, Monday hid the four paintings in his drop-ceiling at first. Figuring that wasn't the best place to conceal them, he then placed the paintings in a steamer trunk and brought them to a hayloft at the contaminated Picillo Pig Farm in Rhode Island. Along the way, because he felt it was weighing him down, he removed the frame from the Rembrandt and tossed it in the Blackstone River. In the end, two other criminals, seeking reductions in pending sentences, strong-armed and forced Monday into giving up the stolen WAM pieces so that they might gain favor with the court. (Please read Anthony Amore's book, “Stealing Rembrandts,” for a full, well-documented account of the 1972 WAM Heist events).
The four masterpieces were returned to the Worcester Art Museum a few weeks after they were stolen. Ten years later, Picasso's Mother and Child by a Fountain was lost to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in a legal battle. Gauguin's Portrait of Mademoiselle Manthey did not return to permanent view for long, and was soon relegated to storage (as are most works on paper these days), only put on view at brief intervals to compliment changing exhibitions. Of the four works stolen and returned to the Worcester Art Museum in 1972, only two can be regularly seen by visitors today: Rembrandt's Saint Bartholomew and Paul Gauguin's Brooding Woman. Both are nicely featured in updated galleries, and are well worth the trip.