#The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston
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The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Theft
Five things you probably didn’t know about the biggest art heist in history
Most art galleries and museums are famous for the art they contain. London’s National Gallery has Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers”; “The Starry Night” meanwhile, is held at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, in good company alongside Salvador Dalì’s melting clocks, Andy Warhol’s soup cans and Frida Kahlo’s self-portrait.
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, however, is now more famous for the artwork that is not there, or at least, that is no longer there.
On March 18 1990 the museum fell prey to history’s biggest art heist. Thirteen works of art estimated to be worth over half a billion dollars — including three Rembrandts and a Vermeer — were stolen in the middle of the night, while the two security guards sat in the basement bound in duct tape.
The robbery is a treasure trove of surprising facts and unexpected plot twists. Here are five things that make the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and its famous theft, so interesting.
The woman behind the building:
Isabella Stewart Gardner, the museum’s founder and namesake, is a fascinating character. The daughter and eventual widow of two successful businessmen, Gardner was a philanthropist and art collector who built the museum to house her stash.
“When she opened the museum in 1903 she mandated that it be free of charge, to gain the appreciation and the attendance of all of Boston,” Stephan Kurkjian, author of “Master Thieves: The Boston Gangsters Who Pulled Off the World’s Greatest Art Heist”, said in the programme. “Her museum, at that point in time, was the largest collection of art by a private individual in America.”
Gardner also had links to the fledgling campaign for women’s political rights. The museum displays the photographs and letters of her friend Julia Ward Howe, an organizer of two US suffrage societies, and a print of Ethel Smyth, a composer and close friend of the English Suffragette leader Emmeline Pankhurst.
Gardner met Smyth through their mutual friend, the painter John Singer Sargent, whose portrait of Gardener raised eyebrows for the low-cut neckline he gave her.
Gardner seemed to enjoy flirting with scandal and gossip: she once arrived at a Boston Symphony Orchestra performance in a hat band emblazoned with the name of her favorite baseball team, Red Sox, and an illustration in a January 1897 edition of the Boston Globe showed her apparently taking one of Boston Zoo’s lions for a walk.
Somewhat ironically, when the Mona Lisa was stolen in 1911, Gardner told her museum guards that, if they saw anyone trying to rob them, they should shoot to kill.
The art not taken:
The thieves’ loot is estimated to be worth over half a billion dollars. However, they left the building’s most expensive artifact: “The Rape of Europa” by Titian, which Gardner bought from a London art gallery in 1896, then a record price for an old master painting.
Why commit history’s greatest art heist and leave without the priciest piece in the museum? Well, size may have played a role. The largest artwork taken was Rembrandt’s “Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee,” famous for being Rembrandt’s only seascape and measures roughly 5x4 feet. “The Rape of Europa,” meanwhile, is larger, at nearly 6x7 feet.
The Napoleon factor:
Around 2005, the investigation into the stolen artworks took a detour to the French island of Corsica in the Meditteranean Sea. Two Frenchmen with alleged ties to the Corsican mob were trying to sell two paintings: a Rembrandt and a Vermeer. Former FBI Special Agent Bob Wittman was involved in a sting to try and buy them — but the operation eventually fell apart when the men were arrested for selling art taken from the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Nice instead.
Why would “Corsican mobsters,” as correspondent Randi Kaye described them in the programme, be interested in robbing a Boston art museum? The answer could lie in the Bronze Eagle Finial, the 10-inch ornament stolen from the top of a Napoleonic flag during the heist.
“It was sort of an odd choice for the thieves to take (the Finial),” Kaye said, “but it turns out that Corsica is essentially the homeland of Napoleon.” The French emperor was born on the island in 1769, and a national museum is now housed in his former family home.
“It is a very compelling notion,” Kelly Horan, Deputy Editor of the Boston Globe, said in the programme, “that a Corsican band of gangsters might have tried to steal back their flag and pull off the entire rest of the heist in the process.”
A rock’n’roll suspect:
March 18 1990 was not the first time a Rembrandt had been stolen from a Boston museum. In 1975, career criminal and art thief Myles Connor walked into Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts, and walked out with a Rembrandt tucked into his oversized coat pocket. He was the FBI’s first suspect in the Gardner case, however the walls of federal prison — where he was incarcerated on drugs charges — gave him a pretty solid alibi.
When he wasn’t lifting famous artworks from their displays, Connor was a musician. It was through gigging that he met Al Dotoli, who worked with stars including Frank Sinatra and Liza Minelli.
In 1976 Connor was jailed for a separate art theft committed in Maine. Hoping to use his stolen Rembrandt to leverage a lesser sentence, he needed Dotoli — who was on tour with Dionne Warwick — to turn the painting in to the authorities on his behalf.
An invisible thief?
One of the stolen artworks, Édouard Manet’s “Chez Tortoni,” was taken from the museum’s Blue Room on the first floor. The painting stands out for two reasons, the first being its frame. The thieves left almost all of the frames behind, cutting some out of the front.
“To even leave remnants of the painting(s) behind was savage,” Horan said. “In my mind, it’s sort of like slashing someone’s throat.”
The “Chez Tortoni” frame was unusual for where it was left, though: not in the room it was stolen from, but in the chair of the security office downstairs. Even more remarkable, not a single motion detector was set off in the Blue Room. Bar investigating the possibility of ghost robbers, investigators wondered if this pointed to the plot being an inside job.
“At the FBI we found that about 89% of museum institutional heists are inside jobs,” Wittman said. “That’s how these things get stolen.”
By Caitlin Chatterton.
#The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Theft#The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston#Rembrandt#Govert Flinck#Édouard Manet#Johannes Vermeer#Edgar Degas#stolen art#looted art#painter#painting#art#artist#art work#art world#art news#long post#long reads
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Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast (1882-1883) by John Singer Sargent (1856–1925), oil on panel, 32 × 41 cm, The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
#madame gautreau drinking a toast#john singer sargent#painting#oil on panel#art#fine art#portrait#virginie amélie avegno gautreau#19th century#isabella stewart gardner museum#boston#blue room#my upload
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isabella stewart gardner museum / kodak ektar 100 / shot on canon f-1
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📍The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA
photos by me (@edwardian-girl-next-door). reblogs are ok but please don't repost💖
#isabella stewart gardner museum#art museum#boston#boston massachusetts#fine art#academia#art museum aesthetic#art history#medieval#medieval manuscripts#illuminated manuscript#mediaeval#history#furniture#books & reading#bookish
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details of paintings by john singer sargent: sargent & fashion exhibit at the tate britain in london
Mrs Robert Harrison (Helen Smith), 1886; The Honourable Pauline Astor, 1898-9; In a Garden, Corfu, 1909
#john singer sargent#sargent#art#painting#paintings#american painter#fashion#19th century art#19th century painting#early 20th century#20th century#20th century art#edwardian#london#portrait#portrait painting#queer art history#art history#european art#realism#isabella stewart gardner museum#boston museum of fine arts#tate britain#my photos
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Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum 🖤
#isabella stewart gardner museum#there was a documentary based on the heist that happened back in the 90s#it piqued my interest hard#and#after literal years of wanting to come to this place#I did#they have empty frames up in hopes the art returns#kinda sad#idk it’s a beautiful place either way#the garden area 🥹#Boston#museum#mine
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el jaleo
#isabella stewart gardner museum#cambridge#eljaleo#art#john singer sargent#realism#american impressionism#oilpaint#impressionism#1882#boston#art museum#girlblog#girlblogging#digitaldiary#history#dark academia#aesthetic#culture#art culture#this is a girlblog#tumblr girls
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One day, a woman I don't know is going to strike up a half hour conversation with me in a museum about things I care about deeply and she's NOT GOING TO BE STRAIGHT. 😫
Anyway, made a friend at the Gardner. Had an otherwise excellent time with people who are already my friends.
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This is the flag of Napoleon’s Imperial Guard the robbers at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum tried to steal in 1990 but were unsuccessful.
The robbers were successful at stealing the flag’s eagle finial and it remains lost to this day. There is a $100,000 reward for its return.
(Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston)
#Isabella Stewart Gardner was a massive Napoleon fan and has a whole room dedicated to relics of him#pretty interesting#Napoleon#napoleonic#Isabella Stewart Gardner#Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum#napoleonic era#Boston#art museum#museum#art#history#military history#satin#sequins#silk#embroidery#embroidered#napoleonic wars#frev#french revolution#first french empire#french empire#imperial guard#1800s#19th century#napoleon bonaparte#french#French history#France
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The Isabella Stewart Gardner museum
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#garden#garden flowers#flowers#mueseum#fairy aesthetic#fairycore#fairy#aethestic#boston#flowercore#plants#film#digital camera#summer#sunshine#outfit inspiration#outfit ideas#ootd#coqquette#isabella stewart gardner museum#mood board#moodboard
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In the Dressing Room (1910) by Louis Kronberg (American, 1872–1965), pastel on canvas, 60 x 49 cm, The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
#in the dressing room#louis kronberg#pastel on canvas#isabella stewart gardner museum#boston#ballerina#misattributed ballerina to degas#edgar degas#pastel#yellow room#my upload#art#fine art
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isabella stewart gardner museum / kodak ektar 100 / shot on canon f-1
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~ John Singer Sargent, El Jaleo (1882)
📍Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA
photos by me (@edwardian-girl-next-door)
#john singer sargent#my photos#fine art#painting#art history#isabella stewart gardner museum#boston#american art#american artist#american painting#19th century#19th century art#19th century painting#victorian art#victorian painting#1880s#1880s art#1882#belle epoque#la belle epoque#e
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went to a couple museums, feeling a bit desirable now
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