Tuesday, July 6, 2021

In the News: Stolen Picasso and Mondrian Paintings found in Athens

An art heist that happened in Greece in 2012 has been solved. Police found 2 priceless paintings in a man's attic in Greece. Here's the story from Greece's news source E-Kathermerini.


(Image: Pablo Picasso’s “Head of a Woman” and Piet Mondrian’s “Stammer Windmill” Credit: Times of Malta) 

Stolen Picasso found in Athens 
 Newsroom - E-Kathemerini-com, Greece 28.06.2021 • 22:14

Almost nine years after they were stolen in a near-perfect heist at the National Gallery in Athens, Pablo Picasso’s “Head of a Woman” and Piet Mondrian’s “Stammer Windmill” have been found.

The two works were recovered in the eastern Attican town of Keratea, hidden inside the house of a Greek man, who was being monitored by police.

The perpetrators of the 2012 theft had also removed an early 17th-century sketch attributed to the Italian Mannerist artist Guglielmo Caccia. This sketch was found damaged.

The two paintings are now in the possession of the police.

The 2012 art heist had baffled police. The two burglars entered the gallery in the early hours through an unlocked balcony door, having drawn security guards away from the paintings by setting off alarms at several locations throughout the museum.

Security footage shows the men swiftly removing stripping the paintings from their frames.

Although two men were arrested and convicted for the heist, the identity of the mastermind behind the heist remained a mystery.

Picasso painted “Head of a Woman” in 1939. Ten years later, he offered the work to the Greek people in honor of their contribution to the resistance under Nazi occupation.

On the back of the painting, a handwritten dedication of the Spanish painter states: “Pour le peuple grec, hommage de Picasso” (For the Greek people, tribute from Picasso). visual arts crime

ABOUT PIET MONDRIAN'S PAINTING:  Pietmondrian.com said: 
There is a charming bridge alongside the mill, plus a small building which was perhaps for storing the daily farm yield. The view is typically Dutch and in all honesty this painting could have appeared a decade earlier, such is the style used by Mondrian. It was only several years later that he changed his painting approach and at this stage he concentrated on Dutch landscapes, including a number of other paintings of windmills and small rural villages.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, US owns this painting and it is clearly proud of having an original Mondrian within its collection.

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