Swiss justice authorities say a painting seized in Serbia has been confirmed as a stolen masterpiece by French Post-Impressionist Paul Cézanne.
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Zurich prosecutors said on Thursday that the Bührle Foundation certified that the painting is Cézanne’s “The Boy in the Red Vest”.
The painting was worth SFr100 million ($109.6 million) when it was stolen along with three other works from the private Bührle collection in 2008.
Claude Monet’s “Poppy field at Vetheuil” and Vincent van Gogh’s “Blooming Chestnut Branches” were discovered undamaged in a car parked at a mental hospital in Zurich soon after the robbery. The heist was conducted by three armed and masked men who witnesses said spoke German with a Slavic accent.
The other painting still missing is Edgar Degas’s “Ludovic Lepic and his Daughter”, worth about SFr10 million.
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Two paintings recovered from Zurich heist
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Cézanne’s The Boy in the Red Vest and Degas’ Count Lepic and His Daughters, the most and least valuable of the stolen works, are still missing. Two paintings by Vincent van Gogh and Claude Monet were found in an abandoned vehicle in a psychiatric clinic’s car park on Monday afternoon, according to local police. The…
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The theft happened on Sunday at the Bührle Collection – a private museum for Impressionist and post-Impressionist art in Zurich. Three masked men who entered the building with pistols are still at large, police said on Monday, describing the heist as a “spectacular art robbery”. “It’s the biggest ever robbery committed in Switzerland and certainly…
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Emil Georg Bührle started his collection during the Second World War. The unclear provenance of some paintings from Jewish owners has led the foundation to return 13 of them. A look back on the life of the arms dealer who wanted to be remembered as an arts lover. (SF/swissinfo.ch)
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