HNNewShowAskJobs
Built with Tanstack Start
Theft of 'The Weeping Woman' from the National Gallery of Victoria(en.wikipedia.org)
58 points by neom 6 days ago | 34 comments
  • nomilk6 days ago

    > It has been suggested that the thieves knew their art history: the method of the theft was an ironic homage to the 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre.

    In both cases, the thieves unscrewed the painting and took it. Feels a bit over the top to call it an homage, let alone an ironic one.

    • cjs_ac6 hours ago |parent

      I think the irony is that in 1911, Picasso was accused of the theft, whereas in 1986, one of Picasso's works was stolen.

      • jvanderbot4 hours ago |parent

        To say that is planned irony is a bit much

  • mrkpdl2 hours ago

    I laughed out loud at this part, perfect Aussie humour:

    “Chilean Australian artist Juan Davila painted a work titled Picasso Theft and offered to donate it to the National Gallery of Victoria in place of the stolen painting. Davila wrote that "mine is a real one".[25] Davila's Picasso Theft was exhibited in the Sydney Avago Gallery, and then itself was stolen.”

  • kazinator5 hours ago

    > McCaughey stated that a specialised type of screwdriver, not available to the public, would have been required to take the painting off the wall.

    Why bother with measures such as alarms and security cameras when you have the Super Secret Screws!

    • WalterBright4 hours ago |parent

      Being regularly confronted with wretched special screws, there are all kinds of ways to get them out. The usual go-to tool is one designed to unscrew stripped screw heads.

      Just the other day, I was confronted with a security screw that instead of having 4 flutes on it (Phillips head), it had 3. I just drilled it out.

      • nighthawk4544 hours ago |parent

        Nothing worse than a screw you dont have a driver for. I resolved to just have drivers for everything

        https://www.ifixit.com/products/mako-driver-kit-64-precision...

        • ghurtado2 hours ago |parent

          After going through several brands over the years, both domestic and foreign, that's the best set of driver bits that I have ever owned.

          Kinda pricey, but well worth it.

        • Rebelgecko2 hours ago |parent

          No slotted Robertson :(

    • pugworthy4 hours ago |parent

      It very well could have just been Torx back then. I remember opening my original 128k Mac in '85 or so to do the 512K memory upgrade, and a weird specialized screwdriver (Torx) was required to open the case.

      • pipes4 hours ago |parent

        And n64 cartridges and cases. And snes too I think. Another trick is to melt a plastic pen with a lighter and stick it on the screw and wait for it to cool.

        • JKCalhoun3 hours ago |parent

          Ha ha, that's Some Anarchist's-Cookbook-level stuff.

  • niccl4 hours ago

    In reference to the suggestion that the 1986 theft was an homage to a 1911 theft:

    > In 1911, Picasso and his contemporary Guillaume Apollinaire were both suspects in the Mona Lisa theft

    > but were cleared of any association with the crime

    being dead is quite a good alibi

    • drabbiticus3 hours ago |parent

      > being dead is quite a good alibi

      Maybe I'm misreading either TFA or your comment, but both Picasso and Apollinaire were alive in 1911?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_Apollinaire

      Some more details from the Apollinaire wikipedia page:

      > On 7 September 1911, police arrested and jailed Apollinaire on suspicion of aiding and abetting the theft of the Mona Lisa and a number of Egyptian statuettes from the Louvre, but released him a week later. The theft of the statues had been committed in 1907 by a former secretary of Apollinaire, Honoré Joseph Géry Pieret, who had recently returned one of the stolen statues to the French newspaper the Paris-Journal. Apollinaire implicated his friend Picasso, who had bought Iberian statues from Pieret, and who was also brought in for questioning in the theft of the Mona Lisa, but he was also exonerated. In fact, the theft of the Mona Lisa was perpetrated by Vincenzo Peruggia, an Italian house painter who acted alone and was only caught two years later when he tried to sell the painting in Florence.

  • wan8888885 hours ago

    Great video about this “incident” and art theft in general https://youtu.be/EwK24E7QryU

    • highway9002 hours ago |parent

      The timing of the post suggests this episode was the genesis

  • kylecazar6 hours ago

    "the possibility of an "inside job" was not considered."

    Given the circumstances, it probably should have been...

    But then again, this has a happy ending. The painting was returned undamaged, nobody's hurt. Cool read.

  • sharkjacobs5 hours ago

    Art theft is a pretty cool crime.

    • bigstrat2003an hour ago |parent

      There's nothing cool about stealing cultural artifacts and society's ability to enjoy them.

      • stevage37 minutes ago |parent

        Arguably high profile thefts increase interest in art and therefore more people enjoy art.

        Also artworks can still be enjoyed post-theft through replicas etc.

        And if the artwork is returned, as in this case, it's just a big win all round. Creating a new performance artwork in the process.

    • lenerdenator5 hours ago |parent

      Only if it's a proper heist. I don't need more guys just walking in and taking something like they're shoplifting a candy bar. I need guys meticulously planning and executing a theft that dodges the very latest in alarm and anti-theft technology.

      • Peteragain4 hours ago |parent

        "How to steal a million" - a boomerang rather than to screwdriver..

      • accrual4 hours ago |parent

        Bonus points for any rappeling and using tools that cut circular holes in glass.

      • Nicholas_C4 hours ago |parent

        Agreed. If no one uses gymnastics to traverse a laser filled room it's actually pretty lame.

      • WalterBright4 hours ago |parent

        See "The Hot Rock".

      • JKCalhoun3 hours ago |parent

        Topkapi (1964)

      • lcnPylGDnU4H9OF4 hours ago |parent

        Taking the discussion seriously, a case study of a well-planned heist that culminated in someone walking in at the right time and just taking the thing could actually be pretty interesting.

        • dylan6043 hours ago |parent

          Right, all of these amateurs wanting to spend all this money on special glass cutting tools, rappelling equipment, bypassing alarms, or even some Ocean's 11 EMP ridiculousness when you just need a ~$10 tool and a big pair of brass ones to pull it off.

    • ghurtado2 hours ago |parent

      I mean, compared to arson, sure.

      Compared to growing psychedelic mushrooms, I don't think so.

    • hackernewds4 hours ago |parent

      No crime should be described as "cool". Adherence is the foundation of a functioning society.

      Although you could argue the law is not the best arbiter of mortality.

      • protocolture2 hours ago |parent

        Lots of crimes are cool. Adherence is the foundation of slavery.

        Functioning societies need every rule and law tested, and retested continually for suitability.

      • Rebelgecko2 hours ago |parent

        Rosa Parks did a cool crime

      • fwipan hour ago |parent

        You may want to re-examine your own username.

      • throwup2384 hours ago |parent

        It was civil disobedience then. What was the point? No idea, but that’s art for you.