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Snatched and found: The Van Gogh paintings involved in daring art heists

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An handout picture released by Dutch art detective Arthur Brand shows a portrait of him posing with the painting title "Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring", painted by Vincent van Gogh in 1884, at his home in Amsterdam on 11 September 2023.
An handout picture released by Dutch art detective Arthur Brand shows a portrait of him posing with the painting title "Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring", painted by Vincent van Gogh in 1884, at his home in Amsterdam on 11 September 2023.
Photo: Handout / ARTHUR BRAND / AFP
  • A Dutch art detective recently recovered a Vincent van Gogh painting that was stolen during the Covid lockdown.
  • Van Gogh's works have been the target of art heists in the past on multiple occasions.
  • His works 'Poppy Flowers', 'Blossoming Chestnut Branches', and 'The Ramparts of Paris' are among the stolen works. 


A Dutch art detective recently recovered a Vincent van Gogh painting that was stolen from a museum during the coronavirus lockdown three-and-a-half years ago, police said Tuesday.

Art detective Arthur Brand took possession of the missing painting, the 1884 'Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring', worth between €3 million and €6 million (at least R60 million) at his Amsterdam home on Monday, stuffed in a blue IKEA bag.

Van Gogh's works have been the target of art heists in the past on multiple occasions. Here are some other heists involving his works:

'Poppy Flowers' taken twice

Vincent van Gogh (French, 1853–1890), Poppy Field,
Vincent van Gogh (French, 1853–1890), Poppy Field, June 1890, oil on canvas, 82.7 x 102 cm (32.5 x 40.2 in), Kunstmuseum, The Hague.

On 21 August 2010, Van Gogh's 'Poppy Flowers', worth $55 million at the time, was cut out of its frame in broad daylight at the Mohamed Mahmoud Khalil Museum outside Cairo.

An investigation revealed that the museum's alarm system did not work and that 30 out of 47 surveillance cameras were out of order.

READ MORE | A Dutch art detective was handed a stolen R60 million Van Gogh stuffed into a shopping bag

It was the second time the small painting from 1887, which is still missing, had been stolen - the first was in 1997 when it was taken from the same museum and was found only 10 years later in Kuwait.

Left in car park

Blossoming Chestnut Branches, Van Gogh, Vincent Wi
Blossoming Chestnut Branches, Van Gogh, Vincent Willem, 1890.

Van Gogh's 'Blossoming Chestnut Branches' (1890), among four Impressionist masterpieces valued at more than 112 million euros, was stolen from a Zurich museum on 10 February 2008 in one of Europe's biggest-ever art heists.

Three masked men entered the Emil Buehrle Collection at the Kunsthaus Zurich, held up staff at gunpoint, loaded the paintings by Cezanne, Degas, Monet and Van Gogh into a car and sped off.

The Van Gogh and the Monet were later found in an abandoned vehicle in the car park of a nearby psychiatric hospital.

Found in a Manchester loo

On 27 April 2003, a Van Gogh watercolour, 'The Ramparts of Paris' (1887), was stolen from the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester, northern England, along with two other paintings, one by Picasso, the other by Gauguin.

ALSO READ | This is a Robbery: The World's Greatest Art Heist

The police quickly received a tip-off leading to a public toilet just meters away, where they found the paintings rolled up inside a cardboard tube. The Van Gogh suffered a tear in the corner and the two others showed water damage.

The thief left a note claiming that he or she merely wanted to highlight the gallery's inadequate security.

Recovered after 14 years

This is the image of the 1882 painting by Dutch ar
This is the image of the 1882 painting by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh 'View of the Sea at Scheveningen', one of the two Van Gogh paintings that were stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in the early hours of December 7, 2002 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Together with the other painting; 'Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen' the value is estimated to be millions of dollars.
This is the image of the 1882 painting by Dutch ar
This is the image of the 1882 painting by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh 'Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen', one of the two Van Gogh paintings that were stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in the early hours of December 7, 2002 in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Together with the other painting; 'View of the Sea at Scheveningen' the value is estimated to be millions of dollars.

On 7 December 2002, two Van Gogh works valued at several million euros were stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in the middle of the night.

The two Dutch thieves climbed onto the roof, smashed a window with a sledgehammer and snatched the nearest Van Goghs they could reach.

The paintings - 'View of the Sea at Scheveningen' (1882) and the 1884/5 'Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen' - were recovered by Italian investigators 14 years later when they raided a home belonging to a mafia drug baron near Naples.

Half-hour heist

At dawn on 14 April 1991, gunmen stole 20 major paintings from the Van Gogh Museum in one of the most spectacular art thefts since World War II.

But the heist of the century was over within 35 minutes when the paintings, stuffed in garment bags, were recovered from a getaway vehicle abandoned near a train station just 10 minutes from the museum.

The paintings should have been transferred to another car, but the plan was foiled by a mechanical hitch.

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