Art thief blames Dutch museum for ‘negligence’

Updated 29 January 2014
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Art thief blames Dutch museum for ‘negligence’

BUCHAREST: A Romanian man who has admitted stealing masterpieces by Gauguin, Monet and Picasso, wants to pin the blame on the Dutch museum for failing to protect the works, his lawyer said Tuesday.
Radu Dogaru is among six Romanians on trial for the spectacular three-minute heist from the Kunthal museum in Rotterdam in October 2012 which stunned the art world.
Despite their value, none of the paintings was equipped with an alarm, Dutch authorities have said.
“We can clearly speak of negligence with serious consequences,” lawyer Catalin Dancu told journalists.
“If we do not receive answers about who is guilty” for the failure of the security system at the museum, “we are considering hiring Dutch lawyers to start a legal case in The Netherlands or in Romania.”
The move is intended to ease the pressure on Dogaru who faces claims of up to 18 million euros ($24 million) from the insurers of the paintings, which are still missing.
If the Kunsthal museum was found guilty of negligence, “it would have to share the burden of compensation,” Dancu said.
Among the paintings stolen in less than three minutes from the Kunsthal in October 2012 were Picasso’s “Tete d’Arlequin,” Monet’s “Waterloo Bridge” and “Femme Devant une Fenetre Ouverte, dite La Fiancee” by Paul Gauguin.
The missing paintings are feared destroyed after Dogaru’s mother said she had torched them in her stove in the sleepy Romanian village of Carcaliu in a bid to destroy evidence against her son.
She later retracted her statement but experts from Romania’s National History Museum said ashes retrieved from her stove included the remains of three oil paintings and nails from frames used before the end of the 19th century.


Sistine Chapel sketch by Michelangelo goes on show in Dubai

Updated 13 January 2026
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Sistine Chapel sketch by Michelangelo goes on show in Dubai

DUBAI: A previously unknown study by Italian Renaissance artist Michelangelo for perhaps his most famous work, the frescoes on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, went on show in Dubai this week, with Christie’s specialist Giada Damen on hand to convey the significance of the find to Arab News.

The sketch of the right foot of the Libyan Sibyl, whose final form is at the far east end of the Sistine Chapel ceiling in the Vatican, will go under the hammer at a Feb. 5 auction in New York, with an estimate of $1.5 million to $2 million.

This is the first time a work by Michelangelo has gone on show in the UAE. A significant degree of grit and determination went into identifying and verifying the small sketch, which first came to light after an unsuspecting owner sent a photograph to Christie’s online Request an Auction Estimate portal.

The sketch of the right foot of the Libyan Sibyl, whose final form is at the far east end of the Sistine Chapel ceiling in the Vatican, will go under the hammer at a Feb. 5 auction in New York. (Supplied)

Of the roughly 600 sheets by Michelangelo that survive today — only a fraction of the thousands of drawings he must have produced — this is one of only 50 studies relating to the Sistine Chapel.

“This drawing is the only preparatory (drawing) for the Sistine Chapel that has ever come on the market,” Damen explained, adding that the prolific artist was known for burning sketches after a painting had been completed.

“There are so many clues attached to this drawing that point to the fact that it is a real drawing by Michelangelo,” she added, pointing to the red chalk used in the small sketch — typical of the sketches Michelangelo  did in the run-up to the second half of the Sistine Chapel ceiling — as well as a sister sketch housed in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.

“He made the first part of the Sistine ceiling starting in 1508, and it took two years. Then the scaffolding was removed and only at that point, Michelangelo was able to see the ceiling from a distance from the floor of the chapel (and he) realized that actually the figures that he had made, those scenes, they were too crowded and with too small figures that you couldn’t really see all these details,” Damen said of the first half of the ceiling.

“From here on, he decided in the second phase to do bigger figures and less details … and the (Libyan) Sibyl is part of this second phase.”

The figure of the female seer is depicted by Michelangelo in a dynamic, twisted pose, with her toes pressing down against a platform supporting her weight as she holds a book of prophecies.  

 Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) is one of the foremost figures in global art history, famous for his work as a sculptor, architect, painter and thinker. His frescoes on the ceiling and back wall of the Sistine Chapel are among his most famous works.