explainer
columns
- How Educational is Re-Education?
What you learn, or don't learn, at a Chinese labor camp.
Jacob Leibenluft
posted Aug. 21, 2008 - Beach Volleyball in Iran?
How do conservative countries handle scantily clad Olympic athletes?
Kara Hadge
posted Aug. 20, 2008 - Do White People Really Come From the Caucasus?
How Caucasians got their name.
Derek Thompson
posted Aug. 19, 2008 - Jamaican Me Speedy
Why are Jamaicans so good at sprinting?
Nina Shen Rastogi
posted Aug. 18, 2008 - Big Brother in the Odometer
How does the government know how much I'm driving?
Derek Thompson
posted Aug. 15, 2008 - Search for more explainer articles
- Subscribe to the explainer RSS feed
- View our complete explainer archive
How To Steal a European PaintingWhy is art theft so common in Europe?
By Cyrus FarivarUpdated Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008, at 5:36 PM ET

Last Sunday, an art museum in Zurich, Switzerland, was robbed of four paintings worth $160 million. The crooks managed to overpower the staff at gunpoint shortly before closing time and make off with a Van Gogh, a Monet, a Degas, and a Cézanne, which were easily visible in the trunk of their fleeing car. Similar heists have taken place in other European museums in recent years. Why is it so easy to steal art in Europe?
Smaller galleries and no guns. Europe has an especially high concentration of world-class art collections, many of which are housed in modest institutions. The art in Zurich was housed in a 19th-century villa, as opposed to a large-scale museum with a complicated entrance. Further, most security personnel in European museums aren't armed, mostly due to a culture of openness and trust, but also for reasons of expense and liability—you wouldn't want bullets flying around an enclosed space with lots of frightened tourists and precious objets d'art. While many galleries have alarms, guards, and other staff to prevent off-hour thefts, they don't always take precautions to avoid the most obvious scenario: armed criminals walking right through the front door.
American art museums aren't likely to have armed guards, either, but they do tend to have better security overall than their European counterparts. In the United States, your chances of finding a Van Gogh on display in a small gallery are slim; more likely, it would be in a museum on the scale of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York or the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. American museums also tend to be located in modern buildings, where it's easier to set up high-tech sensors and alarms. The proprietors of centuries-old European houses are more reluctant to start drilling through walls and running cables in odd corners.
European museums with modest budgets would rather spend cash on acquisitions and conservations of their collection, rather than higher-tech, airport-style security. (More thorough measures are now in place at the Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway, which temporarily lost its prized version of The Scream in 2004.) That means they must rely on the assumption that no armed robbery would ever take place.
Despite this optimism, there has been a noticeable uptick in the number of art heists in recent years. In response, the FBI instituted a Top Ten Art Crimes list in 2005. One of the most elaborate was a three-man heist of the National Museum of Stockholm, Sweden, where in 2000, $36 million worth of Renoir and Rembrandt paintings were taken in a scheme involving "diversionary explosions" in parts of the city that blocked police access to the site while the crooks escaped via motorboat.
Got a question about today's news? Ask the Explainer.
Explainer thanks Ton Cremers of the Museum Security Network and Steve Keller of Steve R. Keller and Associates.
Correction, Feb. 20, 2008: The original version asked, "Why is art theft so common in the EU?" and then went on to mention heists in Zurich and Oslo. Neither of those cities is in the European Union.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- Bigfoot Corpse A Fraud
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 09:09:19 -0400 - Netherlands Taught How To Play Softball Seconds Before Being Shoved Onto Field Against U.S. Team
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 07:00:48 -0400 - Michael Phelps Returns To His Tank At Sea World
Thu, 21 Aug 2008 07:00:46 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Tom Toles | John McCain likes to tell a story about the foundation of his political faith.
- Broder: A Bellwether Town's Forecast
- Meyerson: Assembling an Obama Nation
- Froomkin: A Reversal for the White House?
- Editorial: The Bush Administration's Silence
- Today's Headlines
- Readers Fend Off a Croc Assault
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 22:23:53 GMT - Kaplan: The New On-Campus Environmentalism
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 21:52:30 GMT - Kaplan: Are We Educating Enough Engineers?
Wed, 20 Aug 2008 21:50:05 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Remembering Stephanie
Thu, 21 August 2008 16:43:07 GMT - A Dying Breed
Thu, 21 August 2008 15:17:14 GMT - TV One-Dimensional
Wed, 20 August 2008 20:31:50 GMT - » More from The Root

explainer













