Jenson Button burglary: Gas suspected in F1 driver break-in
Anaesthetic
gas may have been used against Jenson Button and his wife Jessica
during a burglary in France, the Formula 1 driver's spokesman says.
Two
men, who stole jewellery including Jessica's engagement ring, may have
pumped gas through the air conditioning before Monday's break-in, he
said.The couple were with friends in a rented villa in Saint-Tropez.
The British former F1 champion's spokesman said they were unharmed but everyone was "unsurprisingly shaken".
The Sun newspaper reported that valuables worth £300,000 were stolen.
The couple married in December.
Button's spokesman said: "Two men broke into the property whilst they all slept and stole a number of items of jewellery including, most upsettingly, Jessica's engagement ring.
"The police have indicated that this has become a growing problem in the region with perpetrators going so far as to gas their proposed victims through the air conditioning units before breaking in."
Button, 35, who drives for team McLaren, is based in Monaco, about 80 miles (130km) along the coast from Saint-Tropez. He won the F1 championship in 2009 driving for Brawn GP and finished in eighth place in 2014.
Roman Totenberg’s Stolen Stradivarius Is Found After 35 Years
It
was a cold case for more than three decades — a cold violin case — but
now it has been closed. A Stradivarius violin that disappeared without a
trace after it was stolen in 1980 from the violin virtuoso Roman
Totenberg has been found, and is being restored to his family, said one
of his daughters, Nina Totenberg.
Ms. Totenberg, the legal affairs correspondent for NPR news, reported the discovery of her father’s stolen violin
on Thursday morning on NPR’s “Morning Edition.” She said in an
interview that law enforcement officials were planning to hold a news
conference about it in New York on Thursday afternoon.
The violin — which was made in 1734 and is known as the Ames Stradivarius — was stolen in May 1980
from Mr. Totenberg’s office at the Longy School of Music in Cambridge,
Mass., where he was then the director. Mr. Totenberg, a teacher and
virtuoso who performed as a soloist with major orchestras and worked
with Igor Stravinsky, Aaron Copland, Leopold Stokowski and Arthur
Rubinstein, died in 2012
at the age of 101. His violin was valued at $250,000 when it was
stolen; these days, Stradivarius violins often sell for millions of
dollars.
Stolen
Stradivarius violins are hard to sell because they are so recognizable.
This one turned up, Ms. Totenberg said, after a California woman met
with an appraiser in New York in June with a violin she said she had
inherited from her late ex-husband.
“The
appraiser looks at her and says, ‘Well, I have some good news and some
bad news,’” Ms. Totenberg said. “‘The good news is that this is a real
Stradivarius. And the bad news is it was stolen, 35, 36 years ago from
Roman Totenberg, and I have to report it right away.’ And within two
hours, two agents from the F.B.I. art theft team were there.”
A
law enforcement official said one of the agents was able to call up
digital images of the stolen Stradivarius while en route to see it. Then
measurements were taken, which matched those of the missing Ames. The
official said that no charges are expected to be filed in connection
with the case. Details on the suspected thief were not immediately
available.
Ms.
Totenberg said that the woman had inherited the violin from the man Ms.
Totenberg’s father had suspected all along of stealing the instrument.
The man had been seen in the vicinity of his office at Longy near the
time of the theft, and a woman once visited Mr. Totenberg and told him
that she believed that the man had stolen his violin. But to the
family’s frustration, investigators at the time apparently did not
believe that the tip was sufficient for them to obtain a search warrant.
“My
mother was so frustrated,” Ms. Totenberg recalled, “that she famously
went around Boston asking her friends if they knew anybody in the mob
who would break into this guy’s apartment.”
An F.B.I. agent put in a call to Ms. Totenberg to tell her that the violin had been recovered in late June.
The next morning, Ms. Totenberg spoke by phone with her two sisters. “We were just crying and laughing on the phone,” she said.
Ms.
Totenberg said she was sad that her father was not alive to see his
instrument restored. The bond between musicians and instruments is a
powerful one. After the theft, Mr. Totenberg, who had owned it for 38
years, told CBS News in 1981 that it had taken two decades of playing it
before the instrument reached its potential, saying that “it took some
time to wake it up, to work it out, find all the things that it needed,
the right kind of strings and so on and so on.”
But
she said that he would have been furious “if he’d know that the person
that he’d thought took it had in fact taken it, and all these years had
it hidden away, not maintaining it the way one should, not caring for it
as a special baby, not having it played.”
She
said that the family has now paid back the insurance money that Mr.
Totenberg collected after the violin was stolen, and that it planned to
have the Ames Stradivarius restored and sold.
“We’re
going to make sure that it’s in the hands of another great artist who
will play it in concert halls all over the world,” she said. “All of us
feel very strongly that the voice has been stilled for too long.”
http://www.npr.org/2015/08/06/427718240/a-rarity-reclaimed-stolen-stradivarius-recovered-after-35-years
Spain Says Banker’s Seized Picasso Will Head Back Home
PARIS — To the Spanish authorities, Picasso’s 1906 “Head of a Young Woman” is a unique painting, the only example in Spain
from a pivotal period in the artist’s life. Because of that status, the
courts labeled it a “national treasure” that should not be sold outside
the country.
In
the view of Jaime Botín, a member of a wealthy Spanish banking dynasty,
the work is simply his personal property. Purchased in 1977 and kept on
a yacht docked along Spain’s Mediterranean coast, it is valued at as
much as 26 million euros, or $28.3 million, in today’s booming art
market.
But on Friday, after an apparent tip from the Spanish authorities, it was seized
by French customs officials from the yacht, which had docked in
Corsica. The Spanish government contends that Mr. Botín was trying to
move the Picasso to Switzerland for sale, in defiance of a court ruling
invoking a Spanish law meant to shield such works of art from export.
It
is only the latest collision of powerful forces in the art world, where
demand from the superrich has enticed owners to sell their treasures,
even as national governments scramble to keep such works at home.
Many
countries, including Germany and Ireland, are weighing new export
controls for cherished artworks, like several Rubens paintings that had
been selected for auction this year by the Russborough House museum in
eastern Ireland.
Spain
has had such a protectionist law for 30 years, and the seizure of the
Picasso is being closely watched as an illustration of how an attempt to
protect state interests can clash with private ownership rights.
Rafael
Mateu de Ros, Mr. Botín’s lawyer in Madrid, said in a statement that
his client is pressing an appeal to Spain’s Supreme Court, arguing that
the painting could not have been exported unlawfully because it was
purchased abroad, and its permanent address was aboard the yacht, the
Adix, which is registered in Britain.
“For
years now, the picture has been inside a British vessel, which is
foreign territory for all who that may concern, even when it is moored
in Spanish ports,” he added.
Spain
could ultimately take ownership of the painting if it finds that Mr.
Botín, 79, violated its cultural protection laws against illicit
trafficking. Or it could simply fine Mr. Botín and bar him from moving
it out of the country again. Infractions carry administrative penalties
of up to 600,000 euros.
Mr.
Botín, a member of the family that controls Banco Santander, bought the
Picasso painting of a longhaired woman in 1977, at the Marlborough Fine
Art Fair in London, for his personal collection.
Spain’s
cultural protection legislation, dating from 1985, requires museums,
dealers and private owners to obtain export licenses for any work over
100 years old before it can be moved out of the country. Last year, the
Spanish authorities say, they received more than 14,000 requests for
export licenses for sales and exhibition loans. Seventy applications
were denied, and the state acquired 27 of the works at issue.
Mr.
Botín’s Picasso painting was classified as a national treasure by
Spain’s historic heritage department, overseen by the Culture Ministry,
after Christie’s sought an export license that would allow the banking
magnate to auction the work in London. In 2013, the ministry denied him
permission to sell the work abroad, declaring that no similar work
remained on Spanish territory.
Picasso
is said to have painted “Head of a Young Woman” during the summer of
1906 in Gósol, a remote Spanish village in the Pyrenees. Art historians
describe that year as decisive for the artist, presaging the birth of
Cubism.
In
the years that followed, Mr. Botín fought the cultural heritage
designation, arguing that the work was not only stored on a vessel
registered to Britain but that it was owned by a Panamanian company in
which he was registered as a major shareholder. He challenged the
government’s decision in a Spanish appeals court, which informed him in
May that the Culture Ministry’s 2013 export ban would stand.
Since
then, the country’s Guardia Civil has monitored the movement of Mr.
Botín’s yacht, the authorities say. The Spanish press reported that
Spanish officials alerted French customs agents about the painting after
the ship docked in Corsica in July.
Vincent
Guivarch, a spokesman for the French customs agency, said that agents
found the carefully wrapped work in the captain’s quarters. Mr. Botín’s
son, Alfonso, and an Australian captain were on board, he said, and had
been awaiting instructions from Mr. Botín for three days. Among the
documents carried by the ship, Mr. Guivarch added, was the Spanish court
ruling barring the painting’s export.
He
said that the Botíns planned to fly the work to Switzerland, although
the precise destination was not known. The country is a hub for free
ports, or zones where art can be privately sold and stored under the
names of offshore companies.
At
the moment, it is not clear how the Spanish government will proceed
with the recovery of the artwork, which remains in the hands of the
French authorities. Museum experts doubt that the government will move
aggressively against Mr. Botín, who is highly regarded in Spain and
known for his newspaper articles on ethics and morality, to take
ownership of the painting.
Meanwhile,
Germany’s culture minister is under fire for proposing a similar law,
and Italy is considering loosening its restrictions, under pressure from
dealers who want to take advantage of the hot market for Modern and
contemporary art.
Last
year, the global art market topped 51 billion euros, according to a
European Fine Art Fair report. In May, another Picasso painting, the
1955 “Les Femmes d’Alger (Version ‘O’),” brought $179 million — a global
auction record for a work of art — in New York.
At
a budget presentation this week, Spain’s culture minister, Íñigo Méndez
de Vigo, said the ministry was working with the Guardia Civil to
recover the painting. “I am pleased that a work of this quality —
declared ineligible for export — is returning to Spain,” he said.
Correction: August 6, 2015
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article paraphrased incorrectly from a statement by Rafael Mateu de Ros, Mr. Botín’s lawyer in Madrid, about Mr. Botín’s appeal to Spain’s Supreme Court. The appeal has been filed and he said Mr. Botín is pressing it; he did not say that Mr. Botín would file an appeal.
Police initially thought he had had a cardiac arrest and did not realise for nearly a week he had been shot.
A 43-year-old man from Rugby has been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the inquiry, Essex Police said.
Palmer was jailed for eight years in 2001 for masterminding a timeshare fraud targeting people across the UK.
Det Ch Insp Simon Werrett, who is leading the murder investigation, said: "This is a positive development but we are continuing to appeal for witnesses to any suspicious activity in the area.
"Sandpit Lane is a popular spot for joggers and dog-walkers and I am particularly keen to hear from anyone who was in the vicinity between 16:00 BST and 18:00 BST on Wednesday, June 24."
The arrested man has been released on police bail until 23 September pending further inquiries.
Palmer's wealth was once estimated at £300m, according to an Underworld Rich List compiled for the BBC in 2004.
He owned helicopters, a French chateau and a £1m mansion in Bath, and was once considered one of the biggest landowners on Tenerife.
'The timeshare king'
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article paraphrased incorrectly from a statement by Rafael Mateu de Ros, Mr. Botín’s lawyer in Madrid, about Mr. Botín’s appeal to Spain’s Supreme Court. The appeal has been filed and he said Mr. Botín is pressing it; he did not say that Mr. Botín would file an appeal.
John 'Goldfinger' Palmer murder inquiry: Man arrested
A man has been arrested by police investigating the murder of convicted fraudster John "Goldfinger" Palmer.
The 65-year-old was shot at his home on Sandpit Lane in South Weald near Brentwood in Essex on 24 June.Police initially thought he had had a cardiac arrest and did not realise for nearly a week he had been shot.
A 43-year-old man from Rugby has been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder in connection with the inquiry, Essex Police said.
Palmer was jailed for eight years in 2001 for masterminding a timeshare fraud targeting people across the UK.
£300m fortune
A year later, he was ordered to hand over £35m, but the ruling was overturned on a technicality.Det Ch Insp Simon Werrett, who is leading the murder investigation, said: "This is a positive development but we are continuing to appeal for witnesses to any suspicious activity in the area.
"Sandpit Lane is a popular spot for joggers and dog-walkers and I am particularly keen to hear from anyone who was in the vicinity between 16:00 BST and 18:00 BST on Wednesday, June 24."
The arrested man has been released on police bail until 23 September pending further inquiries.
Palmer's wealth was once estimated at £300m, according to an Underworld Rich List compiled for the BBC in 2004.
He owned helicopters, a French chateau and a £1m mansion in Bath, and was once considered one of the biggest landowners on Tenerife.
'The timeshare king'
- Brought up in Olton, near Birmingham, Palmer was a serial truant who left school unable to read or write
- But he made his fortune by going into the gold and jewellery business with a friend
- He was arrested for his alleged role in helping smelt gold stolen from a warehouse at Heathrow in 1983 but was cleared of any wrongdoing
- Palmer's most lucrative enterprise was a timeshare scam based in Tenerife, in which he conned at least 16,000 victims until he was jailed in 2001
- The BBC understands when he was killed, he was on bail after being arrested in Spain over an unknown offence
- Palmer kept a sign on his office desk which read: "Remember the golden rule - he who has the gold makes the rules."
Hatton Garden raid: Two more people charged
A
man and woman have been charged in connection with the Hatton Garden
safety deposit box raid at Easter, the Metropolitan Police have said.
The pair are accused of offences under the Proceeds of Crime Act.Brenn Walters and Terri Robinson, both from Enfield, are due to appear before Westminster magistrates later this month.
Nine people already charged in connection with the heist have appeared in court.
Ransacked
Police said a further three individuals, a man and two women, have also been interviewed under caution.Mr Walters, 43, also known as Ben Perkins, of Manor Court, and Ms Robinson, 35, of Sterling Road, are due to appear in court on 27 August.
Items believed to be worth more than £10m were taken in the raid at Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company in London's jewellery quarter over the Easter weekend.
Thieves broke into the vault and ransacked 73 safety deposit boxes.
Arrests followed in May and June after police raided addresses across London and Kent.
Man cutting hedge finds stolen paintings worth €180,000
Garda confirm recovery of works by Sir John Lavery, Jack B Yeats and Paul Henry
Denis Russell shows the paintings he found in a hedge near his home in Co Wicklow on Tuesday.
A man cutting furze bushes in a field beside his holiday cottage in Co
Wicklow on Tuesday has found paintings by leading Irish artists in a
black bin bag.
The paintings, including works by Sir John Lavery, Paul Henry and Jack B Yeats, appear to be those stolen from a house in Co Wicklow last year. The paintings have an estimated value of €180,000.
Denis Russell
(59), from Donard, Co Wicklow, told The Irish Times he was “strimming
furze bushes” at lunchtime when he “saw a black bag stuck in the middle
of a ditch”.
He opened the bag and found three framed paintings. He said he
“recognised a Paul Henry and a Yeats” and said the other picture was “a
Lavery”.
All three were framed and “in good condition” although “the frame on the Lavery was a bit damaged,” he said.
He said a fourth picture in the black bag was an unframed canvas.
According to a label from the Apollo Gallery in Dublin this was a
portrait Samuel Beckett by Tom Byrne which has “mildew on the canvas”.
The black bag seems to have been thrown into the ditch from the roadway but was “only visible from the field side”.
Mr Russell said the field was not used frequently as he now lives in
London and returns to the cottage on the land that he owns for holidays.
The paintings may have lain there for almost 10 months after they went missing in October last year.
Donard village is close to the Glen of Imaal in west Co Wicklow.
Mr Russell photographed the paintings and then contacted Baltinglass Garda station and a female garda came to collect them.
In a statement gardaí said they had “recovered all the paintings” and taken them to Garda Headquarters for examination.
They said no arrests have been made in the investigation into the theft and that investigations are continuing.
They named three paintings as ‘Portrait of a Lady’ by Sir John Lavery,
‘Landscape with Cottage’ by Paul Henry, and ‘The Fern in the Area’ by
Jack B Yeats.
Ian Whyte,
a leading art auctioneer in Dublin said the combined value of the
paintings could be “up to €180,000”. The painting of Samuel Beckett by
Tom Byrne is less valuable and one is currently for sale at the Duke
Gallery in Dublin for €350.
Gardai appealing to anyone who can assist with the investigation to
contact Baltinglass Garda Station on 059-6482610, the Garda Confidential
Telephone Line 1800 666 111 or any Garda station”.
Stolen painting found after 19 years
Jan Preisler masterpiece is valued at up to 8 million Kč
Police in Prague have made a breakthrough in an almost two-decade-old
case of art theft with the recovery of a painting called “Koupání”
(Bathing) by Jan Preisler.
Art expects give the current value of the work at up to 8 million Kč, according to the Czech Police.
While police have recovered the painting, they are still looking for the person or persons who stole it, according to a joint statement from Prague Police spokesman Tomáš Hulan and Pardubice Regional Police spokesman Jiří Tesař.
The painting was stolen in 1996 from an exhibition at Galerie Hlinsko in the Pardubice region of Central Bohemia.
The painting was on loan from the National Gallery in Prague, which owns it. The National Galley reportedly is now in possession of the painting and has it secured in a depository.
There was a widespread search when the painting was first reported stolen, and the image was entered into a database of stolen art. The search also took place across Europe, as it could not be ruled out that the painting has been taken across the border.
Recently, information surfaced that the painting was being offered for sale. Before the sale could take place, police specialized in art theft intervened and recovered the work.
Preisler had a relatively short career. He was born in 1872 and died in Prague of pneumonia in 1918. In 1903, he stated teaching nude drawing at the Academy of Fine Arts and was a professor from 1913 until his death.
His influences included Alfons Mucha, Vojtěch Preissig and, later, Paul Gauguin. He was among the artists to provide decoration for the Municipal House in Prague. He also helped decorate Hotel Central on Hybernska Street.
His early work was in the neo-Romantic style, but he is also associated with Art Nouveau and the symbolism movement.
A former chief librarian at a Chinese university admitted in
court Tuesday to stealing more than 140 paintings by grandmasters in a
gallery under his watch and replacing them with fakes he painted
himself.
For two years up until 2006, Xiao Yuan substituted famous works including landscapes and calligraphies in a gallery within the library of the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts.
He told the court in his defense that the practice appeared to be rampant and the handling of such paintings was not secure. He said he noticed fakes already hanging in the gallery on his first day on the job. Later, after he replaced some of the remaining masters with his own fakes, he was surprised when he noticed his fake paintings were being substituted with even more fakes.
"I realized someone else had replaced my paintings with their own because I could clearly discern that their works were terribly bad," Xiao, 57, told Guangzhou People's Intermediate Court, which posted a video of the two-hour hearing on its website.
Xiao said that he didn't know who had replaced his fakes,
but that students and professors could take out paintings in the same
way as they could borrow library books.
Xiao sold 125 of the paintings at auction between 2004 and 2011 for more than 34 million yuan ($6 million), and used the money to buy apartments and other paintings. The 18 others he stole are estimated to be worth more than 70 million yuan ($11 million), according to prosecutors.
Xiao pleaded guilty to a corruption charge for substituting the 143 paintings, and said that he deeply regretted his crime.
The stolen works mentioned in the court transcript included paintings by influential 20th century artists Qi Baishi, who used watercolors, and Zhang Daqian, who depicted landscapes and lotuses. Zhang himself was considered a master forger.
Also removed was "Rock and Birds" by Zhu Da, a painter and calligrapher who lived during the 17th century and used ink monochrome.
Xiao said he stopped his stealing when the paintings were moved to another gallery. He was the university's chief librarian until 2010, and his crimes came to light when an employee discovered what had happened and went to the police.
Calls seeking comment from the university were not answered.
Xiao will be sentenced later.
As the director and founder of the Comité Rodin in Paris, Jérôme Le Blay has dedicated his career to the study of the great sculptor's work.
So when he spotted a small Auguste Rodin bronze, "Young Girl With Serpent," at the offices of Christie's in London, he quickly recognized something the auction house had not yet discovered: The piece had been stolen two decades earlier in Beverly Hills.
Essential Arts & Culture: A curated look at SoCal's vast and complex arts world
"I had in my database a precise description of the stolen work,'' Le Blay recalled. The piece didn't come with much documentation, but it matched the description.
"The art market is very secretive," he added. "Works can go through the net quite easily."
Le Blay's recognition of the Rodin piece in 2010 set off a chain of events that led to the piece being recovered this year and offered back to its rightful owner, an elderly Beverly Hills woman. Key assists came from a retired Beverly Hills police detective and a firm that specializes in the recovery of stolen art.
The tale began in 1991, when a Beverly Hills couple returned home from vacation to find that their house in the north side of town had been ransacked of $1 million in art and other personal items, authorities said.
Their housekeeper was later arrested and convicted in connection with the theft.
But he claims to not have stolen the goods himself, claiming that he had bragged about his employers' collection of valuables at a local bar, where the thieves propositioned him to sell a duplicate key to the house for $5,000, according to Christopher A. Marinello, chief executive of the London-based Art Recovery Group.
Some of the items were later recovered, but not the Rodin girl — and no one beyond the housekeeper was ever arrested or charged in connection with the theft.
The couple was prominent among the city's high society and was involved in cultural philanthropy.
The husband has since died and his wife, now in her 80s, still lives in Beverly Hills, police said. Speaking by phone this week, the wife asked that the family name not be revealed.
The bronze is a posthumous cast of the original Rodin sculpture, "Jeune Fille au Serpent," made circa 1886. Authorized casts are considered authentic and are overseen by the Musée Rodin in Paris.
The stolen bronze was created in the early 1970s as the ninth in a limited edition. Marinello said the couple originally acquired the piece from B. Gerald Cantor, namesake of the Cantor Fitzgerald financial services company who amassed one of the world's largest private Rodin collections.
"Young Girl With Serpent" isn't a large work — it stands a little more than a foot tall — but it has "significant historical importance in relation to how the artist evolved," said Bernard Barryte, an authority on Rodin at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford, where he is a curator of European art.
He said the piece provides an example of the young female form that Rodin would revisit in his sculptures of Eve and other pieces.
Rodin sculptures are highly prized by museums and collectors, and a number of pieces have been stolen over the years, including a cast of "The Thinker" from a museum in the Netherlands in 2007.
After Le Blay revealed that the art had been stolen, Christie's pulled the item as part of its due diligence process. "It never went into a sale," a spokeswoman said.
Christie's contacted New Scotland Yard in London, which in 2011 got in touch with the Beverly Hills police — and Det. Sgt. Michael Corren, who had been a supervising officer on the case at the time of the theft. Corren said he contacted one of the original investigators.
"He remembered the case — but not a lot of memory. It was so old, and it was international, but I didn't want it to drop by the wayside," Corren said. "I just don't do that. You follow it to the end."
Corren began an intensive search that involved sifting through old archives on microfiche and following paper trails.
After much digging, the detective determined that the owners had, in fact, made an insurance claim after the theft and reached a settlement.
He also learned that the father of the man who now possessed the sculpture and had consigned it to Christie's had a business not too far away in West Hollywood. But Corren said the current owner, whom he declined to identify, didn't want to give it back.
"I explained to their attorney that we needed to get the sculpture to the rightful owner. They felt otherwise," the detective said.
By this time, the insurance company that had paid the victims for their loss sought to reclaim possession of the Rodin. The case languished as an attorney for the possessor insisted on being paid at least half of what the Rodin was worth, Marinello said. An early Christie's estimate had pegged its value as a high as $100,000.
The insurance company eventually hired Marinello to pursue recovery.
According to Marinello, the Rodin was sold to a Los Angeles-area art dealer shortly after it was stolen.
After the dealer died, he said, the man's son put it up for auction.
While the negotiations continued, Corren said he took another look through the files and found a document that shed more light on the case.
"It was a fluke — apparently it had been misfiled. It gave me information that appears to indicate that the possessor's father may have known that it may have been stolen," Corren said.
Corren said the document was located in a police follow-up report to the original crime. He said the document established that the deceased art dealer had been contacted after the 1991 theft. He declined to say more about the document.
After the document was found, the son agreed to release the bronze to the insurance company and dropped his demand for any payment. Marinello declined to identify the son but emphasized that the man had no knowledge that the Rodin had been stolen.
The item is now in the ownership of the original insurer, according to the police.
As is routine in these cases, Marinello said, the insurance company offered to give the Rodin back to the widow if she would agree to return the insurance payment she had received after the loss.
She told The Times: "Corren is an amazing detective. He's been following this case for more than 20 years. He would not give up and would be relentless — 110% of the credit goes to him."
Corren said, "I knew it was a job that needed to be done. Our job is to advocate for the victims."
"Young Girl With Serpent" is scheduled to go on the auction block at Christie's in New York in November, consigned by the insurance company.
But there are still Rodin works missing from the 1991 home burglary that may, one day, reach the auction block. Among them are an early sketch of "The Kiss" and another sculpture, "The Eternal Spring."
The World Jewish Congress mourns the passing of our beloved friend and esteemed colleague Charles A. Goldstein, counsel to the Commission on Art Recovery and longtime adviser to World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder.
A brilliant lawyer, Charles graduated from Columbia University and Harvard Law School, clerked for the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and was for many years one of the leading real estate lawyers in New York City. In that stage of his distinguished legal career, Charles was the personal attorney to New York Governor Hugh Carey and consultant to the Urban Development Corporation.
In the mid-1990’s, Charles was asked by Ambassador Ronald S. Lauder to develop and lead the then newly created Commission for Art Recovery to assist Holocaust survivors or their heirs in recovering works of art that had been stolen from them by the Nazis and their accomplices. In that capacity, Lauder recalled, “he was fearless in achieving the ultimate goal in law - fairness and justice.”
Over the course of the past two decades, Charles became, in the words of his colleagues at the law firm of Herrick, Feinstein LLP, “one of the leading international experts on the identification and restitution of art that had been looted by the Nazis during and before the Holocaust. Being the intellectual powerhouse that he was, Charles quickly became an expert in this new area of art law and before long became one of its leading practitioners, lecturing and writing extensively on the subject. He was remarkably successful in recovering stolen artworks and other cultural property, despite many obstacles including strenuous opposition from formidable adversaries.
An articulate spokesman for the right of Holocaust victims and their families to reclaim their property from governments, museums and others who had acquired it in the years following World War II, Charles literally rewrote history, and earned the great distinction of helping to right horrific wrongs visited upon Jewish families and others during the Holocaust.”
Charles Goldstein will be greatly missed by all who had the privilege of knowing him and working with him. We extend our deepest condolences to his daughter, Deborah, his son, Graham, and his grandchildren.
While police have recovered the painting, they are still looking for the person or persons who stole it, according to a joint statement from Prague Police spokesman Tomáš Hulan and Pardubice Regional Police spokesman Jiří Tesař.
The painting was stolen in 1996 from an exhibition at Galerie Hlinsko in the Pardubice region of Central Bohemia.
The painting was on loan from the National Gallery in Prague, which owns it. The National Galley reportedly is now in possession of the painting and has it secured in a depository.
There was a widespread search when the painting was first reported stolen, and the image was entered into a database of stolen art. The search also took place across Europe, as it could not be ruled out that the painting has been taken across the border.
Recently, information surfaced that the painting was being offered for sale. Before the sale could take place, police specialized in art theft intervened and recovered the work.
Preisler had a relatively short career. He was born in 1872 and died in Prague of pneumonia in 1918. In 1903, he stated teaching nude drawing at the Academy of Fine Arts and was a professor from 1913 until his death.
His influences included Alfons Mucha, Vojtěch Preissig and, later, Paul Gauguin. He was among the artists to provide decoration for the Municipal House in Prague. He also helped decorate Hotel Central on Hybernska Street.
His early work was in the neo-Romantic style, but he is also associated with Art Nouveau and the symbolism movement.
Thief replaced stolen art with fakes
For two years up until 2006, Xiao Yuan substituted famous works including landscapes and calligraphies in a gallery within the library of the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts.
He told the court in his defense that the practice appeared to be rampant and the handling of such paintings was not secure. He said he noticed fakes already hanging in the gallery on his first day on the job. Later, after he replaced some of the remaining masters with his own fakes, he was surprised when he noticed his fake paintings were being substituted with even more fakes.
"I realized someone else had replaced my paintings with their own because I could clearly discern that their works were terribly bad," Xiao, 57, told Guangzhou People's Intermediate Court, which posted a video of the two-hour hearing on its website.
Xiao sold 125 of the paintings at auction between 2004 and 2011 for more than 34 million yuan ($6 million), and used the money to buy apartments and other paintings. The 18 others he stole are estimated to be worth more than 70 million yuan ($11 million), according to prosecutors.
Xiao pleaded guilty to a corruption charge for substituting the 143 paintings, and said that he deeply regretted his crime.
The stolen works mentioned in the court transcript included paintings by influential 20th century artists Qi Baishi, who used watercolors, and Zhang Daqian, who depicted landscapes and lotuses. Zhang himself was considered a master forger.
Also removed was "Rock and Birds" by Zhu Da, a painter and calligrapher who lived during the 17th century and used ink monochrome.
Xiao said he stopped his stealing when the paintings were moved to another gallery. He was the university's chief librarian until 2010, and his crimes came to light when an employee discovered what had happened and went to the police.
Calls seeking comment from the university were not answered.
Xiao will be sentenced later.
Stolen Rodin sculpture recovered through lucky breaks, persistent chipping
As the director and founder of the Comité Rodin in Paris, Jérôme Le Blay has dedicated his career to the study of the great sculptor's work.
So when he spotted a small Auguste Rodin bronze, "Young Girl With Serpent," at the offices of Christie's in London, he quickly recognized something the auction house had not yet discovered: The piece had been stolen two decades earlier in Beverly Hills.
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"I had in my database a precise description of the stolen work,'' Le Blay recalled. The piece didn't come with much documentation, but it matched the description.
"The art market is very secretive," he added. "Works can go through the net quite easily."
Le Blay's recognition of the Rodin piece in 2010 set off a chain of events that led to the piece being recovered this year and offered back to its rightful owner, an elderly Beverly Hills woman. Key assists came from a retired Beverly Hills police detective and a firm that specializes in the recovery of stolen art.
The tale began in 1991, when a Beverly Hills couple returned home from vacation to find that their house in the north side of town had been ransacked of $1 million in art and other personal items, authorities said.
Their housekeeper was later arrested and convicted in connection with the theft.
But he claims to not have stolen the goods himself, claiming that he had bragged about his employers' collection of valuables at a local bar, where the thieves propositioned him to sell a duplicate key to the house for $5,000, according to Christopher A. Marinello, chief executive of the London-based Art Recovery Group.
Some of the items were later recovered, but not the Rodin girl — and no one beyond the housekeeper was ever arrested or charged in connection with the theft.
The couple was prominent among the city's high society and was involved in cultural philanthropy.
The husband has since died and his wife, now in her 80s, still lives in Beverly Hills, police said. Speaking by phone this week, the wife asked that the family name not be revealed.
The bronze is a posthumous cast of the original Rodin sculpture, "Jeune Fille au Serpent," made circa 1886. Authorized casts are considered authentic and are overseen by the Musée Rodin in Paris.
The stolen bronze was created in the early 1970s as the ninth in a limited edition. Marinello said the couple originally acquired the piece from B. Gerald Cantor, namesake of the Cantor Fitzgerald financial services company who amassed one of the world's largest private Rodin collections.
"Young Girl With Serpent" isn't a large work — it stands a little more than a foot tall — but it has "significant historical importance in relation to how the artist evolved," said Bernard Barryte, an authority on Rodin at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford, where he is a curator of European art.
He said the piece provides an example of the young female form that Rodin would revisit in his sculptures of Eve and other pieces.
Rodin sculptures are highly prized by museums and collectors, and a number of pieces have been stolen over the years, including a cast of "The Thinker" from a museum in the Netherlands in 2007.
After Le Blay revealed that the art had been stolen, Christie's pulled the item as part of its due diligence process. "It never went into a sale," a spokeswoman said.
Christie's contacted New Scotland Yard in London, which in 2011 got in touch with the Beverly Hills police — and Det. Sgt. Michael Corren, who had been a supervising officer on the case at the time of the theft. Corren said he contacted one of the original investigators.
"He remembered the case — but not a lot of memory. It was so old, and it was international, but I didn't want it to drop by the wayside," Corren said. "I just don't do that. You follow it to the end."
Corren began an intensive search that involved sifting through old archives on microfiche and following paper trails.
After much digging, the detective determined that the owners had, in fact, made an insurance claim after the theft and reached a settlement.
He also learned that the father of the man who now possessed the sculpture and had consigned it to Christie's had a business not too far away in West Hollywood. But Corren said the current owner, whom he declined to identify, didn't want to give it back.
"I explained to their attorney that we needed to get the sculpture to the rightful owner. They felt otherwise," the detective said.
By this time, the insurance company that had paid the victims for their loss sought to reclaim possession of the Rodin. The case languished as an attorney for the possessor insisted on being paid at least half of what the Rodin was worth, Marinello said. An early Christie's estimate had pegged its value as a high as $100,000.
The insurance company eventually hired Marinello to pursue recovery.
According to Marinello, the Rodin was sold to a Los Angeles-area art dealer shortly after it was stolen.
After the dealer died, he said, the man's son put it up for auction.
While the negotiations continued, Corren said he took another look through the files and found a document that shed more light on the case.
"It was a fluke — apparently it had been misfiled. It gave me information that appears to indicate that the possessor's father may have known that it may have been stolen," Corren said.
Corren said the document was located in a police follow-up report to the original crime. He said the document established that the deceased art dealer had been contacted after the 1991 theft. He declined to say more about the document.
After the document was found, the son agreed to release the bronze to the insurance company and dropped his demand for any payment. Marinello declined to identify the son but emphasized that the man had no knowledge that the Rodin had been stolen.
The item is now in the ownership of the original insurer, according to the police.
As is routine in these cases, Marinello said, the insurance company offered to give the Rodin back to the widow if she would agree to return the insurance payment she had received after the loss.
She told The Times: "Corren is an amazing detective. He's been following this case for more than 20 years. He would not give up and would be relentless — 110% of the credit goes to him."
"Young Girl With Serpent" is scheduled to go on the auction block at Christie's in New York in November, consigned by the insurance company.
But there are still Rodin works missing from the 1991 home burglary that may, one day, reach the auction block. Among them are an early sketch of "The Kiss" and another sculpture, "The Eternal Spring."
World Jewish Congress mourns Charles Goldstein
Mon, 03 Aug 2015
The World Jewish Congress mourns the passing of our beloved friend and esteemed colleague Charles A. Goldstein, counsel to the Commission on Art Recovery and longtime adviser to World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder.
A brilliant lawyer, Charles graduated from Columbia University and Harvard Law School, clerked for the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and was for many years one of the leading real estate lawyers in New York City. In that stage of his distinguished legal career, Charles was the personal attorney to New York Governor Hugh Carey and consultant to the Urban Development Corporation.
In the mid-1990’s, Charles was asked by Ambassador Ronald S. Lauder to develop and lead the then newly created Commission for Art Recovery to assist Holocaust survivors or their heirs in recovering works of art that had been stolen from them by the Nazis and their accomplices. In that capacity, Lauder recalled, “he was fearless in achieving the ultimate goal in law - fairness and justice.”
Over the course of the past two decades, Charles became, in the words of his colleagues at the law firm of Herrick, Feinstein LLP, “one of the leading international experts on the identification and restitution of art that had been looted by the Nazis during and before the Holocaust. Being the intellectual powerhouse that he was, Charles quickly became an expert in this new area of art law and before long became one of its leading practitioners, lecturing and writing extensively on the subject. He was remarkably successful in recovering stolen artworks and other cultural property, despite many obstacles including strenuous opposition from formidable adversaries.
An articulate spokesman for the right of Holocaust victims and their families to reclaim their property from governments, museums and others who had acquired it in the years following World War II, Charles literally rewrote history, and earned the great distinction of helping to right horrific wrongs visited upon Jewish families and others during the Holocaust.”
Charles Goldstein will be greatly missed by all who had the privilege of knowing him and working with him. We extend our deepest condolences to his daughter, Deborah, his son, Graham, and his grandchildren.
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