Visual Arts

Advertising

What to do in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas

Make This Your Home Page

Get GuideLive Newsletters

French museum reels from repeat theft of works

11:18 AM CDT on Tuesday, August 7, 2007

PARIS – Stolen again.

Last time, it was a museum curator who staged a Hollywood-worthy theft of impressionist paintings by Monet and Sisley before landing in a French prison. This time, the five masked gunmen who snatched the canvases are still at large.

As a handful of visitors milled about the Museum of Fine Arts in Nice on the French Riviera on Sunday, the five men dashed in and made off with four paintings worth about $1.4 million, police said.

The stolen paintings were French master Claude Monet's 1897 Cliffs Near Dieppe, fellow impressionist Alfred Sisley's 1890 Lane of Poplars Near Moret and Flemish master Pieter Bruegel's 17th-century Allegory of Earth and Allegory of Water, said the museum's deputy curator, Patricia Grimaud.

The first two had vanished from the museum's walls before: In 1998, then-curator Jean Forneris staged a heist in which masked, armed men took him "hostage" and forced him to take them to the museum. The men overpowered guards and tied up the staff members before fleeing with the paintings – in the curator's car.

He was convicted and served 18 months in prison.

The Associated Press

This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow.

Advertising

© 2008 The Dallas Morning News, Inc.