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Art theft - Wikipedia. Art theft is usually for the purpose of resale or for ransom (sometimes called artnapping).
110480 de 51484 Paulo 49074 São 46318 do 40723 Brasil 38043 da 37922 Da 35214 US$ 33367 Folha 2900 Local 19724 Reportagem 1790 José 15364. Art theft is usually for the purpose of resale or for ransom (sometimes called artnapping). Stolen art is sometimes used by criminals as collateral to secure loans.
Stolen art is sometimes used by criminals as collateral to secure loans.[1] Only a small percentage of stolen art is recovered—estimates range from 5 to 1. This means that little is known about the scope and characteristics of art theft. Body Online Putlocker here. Individual theft[edit]Many thieves are motivated by the fact that valuable art pieces are worth millions of dollars and weigh only a few kilograms at most.
Transport for items such as paintings is also trivial, assuming the thief is willing to inflict some damage to the painting by cutting it off the frame and rolling it up into a tube carrier.[citation needed] Also, while most high- profile museums have extremely tight security, many places with multimillion- dollar art collections works have disproportionately poor security measures.[2] That makes them susceptible to thefts that are slightly more complicated than a typical smash- and- grab, but offer a huge potential payoff. Thieves sometimes target works based on their own familiarity with the artist, rather than the artist's reputation in the art world or the theoretical value of the work.[3]Unfortunately for the thieves, it is extremely difficult to sell the most famous and valuable works without getting caught, because any interested buyer will almost certainly know the work is stolen and advertising it risks someone contacting the authorities. It is also difficult for the buyer to display the work to visitors without it being recognized as stolen, thus defeating much of the point of owning the art. Many famous works have instead been held for ransom from the legitimate owner or even returned without ransom, due to the lack of black- market customers. Returning for ransom also risks a sting operation.[3]For those with substantial collections, such as the Marquess of Cholmondeley at Houghton Hall, the risk of theft is neither negligible nor negotiable.[4]Jean- Baptiste Oudry's White Duck was stolen from the Cholmondeley collection at Houghton Hall in 1. The canvas is still missing.[5]Prevention in museums[edit]Museums can take numerous measures to prevent the theft of artworks include having enough guides or guards to watch displayed items, avoiding situations where security- camera sightlines are blocked, and fastening paintings to walls with hanging wires that are not too thin and with locks.[6]Art theft education[edit]The Smithsonian Institution sponsors the National Conference on Cultural Property Protection, held annually in Washington, D. C. The conference is aimed at professionals in the field of cultural property protection.
Since 1. 99. 6, the Netherlands- based Museum Security Network has disseminated news and information related to issues of cultural property loss and recovery. Since its founding the Museum Security Network has collected and disseminated over 4. The founder of the Museum Security Network, Ton Cremers, is recipient of the National Conference on Cultural Property Protection Robert Burke Award.
Association for Research into Crimes against Art (ARCA). ARCA is a nonprofit think tank dedicated principally to raising the profile of art crime (art forgery and vandalism, as well as theft) as an academic subject. Since 2. 00. 9, ARCA has offered an unaccredited postgraduate certificate program dedicated to this field of study. The Postgraduate Certificate Program in Art Crime and Cultural Heritage Protection is held from June to August every year in Italy. A few American universities, including New York University, also offer courses on art crime. Recovery[edit]In the public sphere, Interpol, the FBI Art Crime Team, London's Metropolitan Police, New York Police Department's special frauds squad[7] and a number of other law enforcement agencies worldwide maintain "squads" dedicated to investigating thefts of this nature and recovering stolen works of art. According to Robert King Wittman, a former FBI agent who led the Art Crime Team until his retirement in 2.
Europe, and most art thefts investigated by the FBI involve agents at local offices who handle routine property theft. Art and antiquity crime is tolerated, in part, because it is considered a victimless crime," Wittman said in 2. In response to a growing public awareness of art theft and recovery, a number of not- for- profit and private companies now act both to record information about losses and oversee recovery efforts for claimed works of art. Among the most notable are: In January 2. Spain's Interior Ministry announced that police from 1. European countries, with the support of Interpol, Europol, and Unesco, had arrested 7. The pan- European operation had begun in October, 2.
The ministry did not provide an inventory of recovered items or the locations of the arrests.[8]State theft, wartime looting and misappropriation by museums[edit]From 1. World War II, the Nazi regime maintained a policy of looting art for sale or for removal to museums in the Third Reich. Hermann Göring, head of the Luftwaffe, personally took charge of hundreds of valuable pieces, generally stolen from Jews and other victims of the Holocaust. The Nest Full Movie Online Free on this page.
In early 2. 01. 1, about 1,5. Nazis during and before World War II, were confiscated from a private home in Munich, Germany. The confiscation was not made public until November 2. With an estimated value of $1 billion, their discovery is considered "astounding,"[1. Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Marc Chagall, Paul Klee, Max Beckmann and Emil Nolde, all of which were considered lost.[1. The looted, mostly Modernist art, was banned by the Nazis when they came to power, on the grounds that it was "un- German" or Jewish Bolshevist in nature.[1.
Descendants of Jewish collectors who were robbed of their works by the Nazis may be able to claim ownership of many of the works.[1. Members of the families of the original owners of these artworks have, in many cases, persisted in claiming title to their pre- war property. The 1. 96. 4 film The Train, starring Burt Lancaster, is based on the true story of works of art which had been placed in storage for protection in France during the war, but was looted by the Germans from French museums and private art collections, to be shipped by train back to Germany.
Another film, The Monuments Men (2. George Clooney, is based on a similar true- life story. In this film, U. S. Europe, before their destruction by Nazi plunder. In 2. 00. 6, after a protracted court battle in the United States and Austria (see Republic of Austria v.
Altmann), five paintings by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt were returned to Maria Altmann, the niece of pre- war owner, Ferdinand Bloch- Bauer. Two of the paintings were portraits of Altmann's aunt, Adele.
The more famous of the two, the gold Portrait of Adele Bloch- Bauer I, was sold in 2. Altmann and her co- heirs to philanthropist Ronald Lauder for $1. At the time of the sale, it was the highest known price ever paid for a painting.
The remaining four restituted paintings were later sold at Christie's New York for over $1. Because antiquities are often regarded by the country of origin as national treasures, there are numerous cases where artworks (often displayed in the acquiring country for decades) have become the subject of highly charged and political controversy.
One prominent example is the case of the Elgin Marbles, which were moved from Greece to the British Museum in 1. Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin.
Many different Greek governments have maintained that removal was tantamount to theft.[1. Similar controversies have arisen over Etruscan, Aztec, and Italian artworks, with advocates of the originating countries generally alleging that the removal of artifacts is a pernicious form of cultural imperialism. Yale University's Peabody Museum of Natural History is engaged (as of November 2. Peru about possible repatriation of artifacts taken during the excavation of Machu Picchu by Yale's Hiram Bingham.