Italian police find stolen
Van Goghs 14 years after infamous Amsterdam heist
Police
unveil paintings recovered from house in stronghold of Camorra crime syndicate
near
Van Gogh’s
View of the Sea at Scheveningen is presented at a press conference in Naples
after it was recovered from a house near the Italian city. Photograph: Ciro
Fusco/EPA
paintings
that were stolen from a museum in Amsterdam more than a decade ago have been
recovered by Italian authorities in Naples following a sting operation that
targeted organised crime.
The
paintings, View of the Sea at Scheveningen, painted in 1882, and Congregation
Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen, painted in 1884, were recently
discovered after allegedly being hidden away in one of the houses of an
international drug trafficker based in Castellammare di Stabia, near Naples.
“When we
finally found them, we did not believe our eyes,” an unnamed local official
told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica.
The
authenticity of the paintings has already been confirmed by an expert from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, from where they
were stolen in 2002.
Axel
Rütger, director of the Van Gogh Museum, said he wasn’t sure when the paintings
could be returned to the Netherlands, as they are likely to be needed as
evidence in the ensuing trial.
“After so
many years I didn’t dare to think they would ever return,” Rütger said. “We’ve
waited 14 years for this moment and of course we’d like to take them straight
home. We’ll need to exercise a bit of patience, but I am convinced we can count
on the support of the Italian authorities.”
The
frames have been removed and the seascape has a small patch of damage in the
bottom left-hand corner, the museum said, but otherwise the paintings appeared
to be in good condition.
The theft
was considered one of the most infamous heists to rock the art world in recent
times. The thieves entered the Van Gogh museum from the roof of the building,
which allowed them to get past security and cameras undetected, even though
their entry did trigger alarms. They had used a ladder to climb up to a window
and then smashed through it using a cloth to protect their hands.
Two men,
Octave Durham, an art thief who earned the nickname The Monkey for his ability
to evade police, and his accomplice Henk Bieslijn, were eventually convicted of
the theft in 2004 after police discovered their DNA at the scene of the crime.
They were handed four year sentences, but authorities were never able to track
down the stolen works.
The FBI
considered the heist one of the “top 10” art crimes, according to its website. Italian investigative
authorities told the Ansa news agency that the paintings were worth £77m.
View of
the Sea at Scheveningen is one of Van Gogh’s early paintings and depicts the
beach resort close to The Hague. It was the only work in the museum’s
collection from Van Gogh’s two years in The Hague and one of just two Dutch
seascapes the artist made.
Congregation
Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen is a smaller work that Van Gogh painted
for his mother in 1884, and depicts a church in Brabant where his father
Theodorus was attached as a preacher. After his father’s death in 1885 Van Gogh
revised the painting, adding figures of women wearing black shawls used in
mourning.
Dario
Franceschini, the Italian culture minister, said the discovery was
extraordinary and “confirmed the strength of the Italian system in the fight
against the illicit trafficking of works of art”.
“The
result of this investigation confirms how interested criminal organisations are
in art works which they use both as a form of investment and as a source of
funds,” he said in a statement.
John
Dickie, a historian and expert in organised crime in Italy,
said the reason the country was known for its expertise in following the
illicit trade of art was the extent to which that trade existed in the first
place.
“Italy
also has the best mafia police in the world, because it has the most powerful
mafia networks,” he added.
The town
of Castellammare di Stabia, about 19 miles south-east of Naples, where the
paintings were found, has long been known as a Camorra stronghold. It was the
home of Assunta Maresca, known as Pupetta, who was a former beauty queen,
convicted murderer, and Camorra boss described as a trailblazer and suffragette
in the syndicate.
Unlike
the highly organised Sicilian mafia, the Camorra is an “archipelago of gangs”,
Dickie said, with some branches being more sophisticated than others.
“With
this sort of thing, it is easy to say the Camorra did it and then jump to the
conclusion that the Camorra is moving into the art market,” Dickie said.
He said
the discovery and the alleged involvement of the Camorra actually reflects the
opportunistic nature of the Neapolitan syndicate. Its members spend a lot of
time in prison and are part of a vast underworld network in which illegal goods
are sold and traded.
“I don’t
think we need to conclude that it’s the Camorra boss who is putting this art on
his mantlepiece. A lot of times these people don’t have a lot of class [and]
they wouldn’t necessarily be impressed by having this,” Dickie said.
Generally,
highly-valued art can be stolen by thieves for the purpose of selling it, only
for the thieves to realise that the work is so famous that it cannot be purchased
and shown, forcing them to sell or trade it at a heavy discount.
The camorristi
who end up with precious works of art may not even be aware of the value of the
painting they have in their posession.
Federico
Varese, an expert in criminology from Oxford University, said it was
unsurprising that the discovery exposed a link between Amsterdam and the
Camorra, given the Dutch city’s reputation as a major drug hub. Cross-border
investigations dating back to the 1980s had found the presence of the Camorra
in Amsterdam.
“What I
know for sure is that a lot of camorristi are in Amsterdam, not because
they want to be rooted there or deal in racketeering of shops or that kind of
thing, but because they are there to buy drugs. Amsterdam is a hub for the
buying and selling of illegal goods,” Varese said.
In the
Camorra underworld, art – like anything that is valuable – is a currency that
can be used in drug trafficking. In some cases, it might also be seen as giving
prestige to camorristi, Varese said.
The
Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, informed his Dutch counterpart Mark Rutte
about the police operation before the funeral in Jerusalem of former Israeli
leader Shimon Peres, according to a Reuters report.
Art Hostage Comments:
In January 2016, officers arrested two suspected clan members, Raffaele Imperiale and Mario Cerrone. Reports say that Mario Cerrone confessed that the two stolen Van Goghs were hidden in Mr Imperiale's home in Castellammare di Stabia, 34km (21 miles) from Naples. They were wrapped in a cloth and stashed inside safe at a house in Castellammare di Stabia, near Pomeii.
The actual thieves, Octave Durham, an art thief who earned the nickname ‘The Monkey’ for his evasiveness, and his accomplice, Henk Bieslijn – were convicted with four-year sentences, but the priceless art was never recovered – until now
Art Hostage Comments:
In January 2016, officers arrested two suspected clan members, Raffaele Imperiale and Mario Cerrone. Reports say that Mario Cerrone confessed that the two stolen Van Goghs were hidden in Mr Imperiale's home in Castellammare di Stabia, 34km (21 miles) from Naples. They were wrapped in a cloth and stashed inside safe at a house in Castellammare di Stabia, near Pomeii.
The actual thieves, Octave Durham, an art thief who earned the nickname ‘The Monkey’ for his evasiveness, and his accomplice, Henk Bieslijn – were convicted with four-year sentences, but the priceless art was never recovered – until now
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