Dutch art detective says he has 'proof of life' of stolen Van Gogh painting

Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring was snatched from a museum in Laren in March

Dutch detectives are investigating two apparent “proof of life” photographs of a £5m Vincent van Gogh painting stolen from a museum during the coronavirus lockdown.

The images appear to show Van Gogh’s Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring alongside a copy of the New York Times published on the day of the painting’s theft.

They have been passed to the police after being obtained by Arthur Brand, a renowned art detective. Brand told Agence France-Presse that the photographs had been “circulating in mafia circles” and had been handed to him by a source he declined to identify.

A spokesman for the Dutch police confirmed to the Guardian that the images were now “part of the investigation” into the theft.

Van Gogh’s masterpiece was stolen in the early hours of 30 March after a thief used a sledgehammer to smash through the reinforced glass front door of the Singer Laren museum, in Laren, a town several miles east of Amsterdam. The museum was closed owing to the pandemic.

Security footage of the raid released by the police in April showed that the thief arrived at the museum on a motorbike, broke in and then ran out with the painting tucked under his right arm.

The photographs obtained by Brand reveal a new scratch on the bottom of the painting, thought to have been picked up during the raid. The back of the artwork can also be seen, providing apparent evidence of its authenticity.

“There is no doubt in my mind that this is the genuine article,” Brand said. “It could simply be that they are trying to find a buyer in the criminal underworld.”

During a press conference the day after the theft, the museum’s director, Jan Rudolph de Lorm, said he was “incredibly pissed off” at the loss of the painting, which had been on loan from the Groninger Museum. It was stolen on the day Van Gogh was born 167 years ago.

The 25cm by 57cm oil-on-paper painting of a vicarage garden is one of a series of works done by Van Gogh between 1883 and 1884 when he was living with his parents in Nuenen, where his father was a minister.

The Singer Laren museum showcases the original collection of the American artist and collector William Singer and his wife, Anna.

In 2007, thieves stole seven statues from the museum’s garden worth an estimated €1.3m, including a cast of the statue The Thinker by the French artist Auguste Rodin. The statue was later found in a damaged state. In 2010 the two thieves responsible were sentenced to four years in prison, which was reduced on appeal to two and nearly three years respectively.

Contributor

Daniel Boffey in Brussels

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Van Gogh painting stolen from Dutch museum
Thieves have stolen the £5m Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring by the famous artist from the Singer Laren museum

Daniel Boffey in Brussels

30, Mar, 2020 @5:10 PM

Article image
Treble Dutch: £13m old master painting stolen for a third time
Two Laughing Boys by Frans Hals seized in overnight raid at museum

Jennifer Rankin

27, Aug, 2020 @4:25 PM

Article image
Stolen Van Gogh painting still missing
Egyptian minister retracts statement that Van Gogh painting was recovered hours after theft from Cairo museum

Staff and agencies

22, Aug, 2010 @7:38 PM

Article image
Art detective Arthur Brand: how I found a stolen Picasso
The man dubbed ‘Indiana Jones of the art world’ says the paintings can ‘become a burden’

Jon Henley European affairs correspondent

29, Mar, 2019 @2:26 PM

Article image
Unseen Van Gogh sketches that rework scorned masterpiece to go on display
Preparatory work for ‘redoing’ of The Potato Eaters – savaged in his lifetime – to feature in exhibition

Daniel Boffey in Amsterdam

07, Oct, 2021 @9:00 AM

Article image
Gloomy Van Gogh self-portrait in Oslo gallery confirmed authentic
Only known painting by Dutch master while he had psychosis is ‘unmistakably’ his work

Mark Brown Arts correspondent

20, Jan, 2020 @2:58 PM

Article image
Van Gogh and Gauguin letter about brothel visit sells for €210,000
‘Exceptional’ correspondence sent from Arles in 1888 is bought by Van Gogh Museum

Daniel Boffey in Brussels

17, Jun, 2020 @11:22 AM

Article image
Stolen Dutch paintings offered for sale by Ukrainian militia
Friesland museum from which golden age artworks vanished in 2005 believes security service and far-right party also involved in attempt to sell canvases

Jon Henley

07, Dec, 2015 @7:34 PM

Article image
Place depicted in Van Gogh's final painting found with help of postcard
French hillside scene in Tree Roots may have been painted hours before artist’s death

Daniel Boffey in Brussels

28, Jul, 2020 @11:58 AM

Article image
Vincent van Gogh Paris painting from 1887 to make public debut
Scène de rue à Montmartre has been part of same French family’s private collection for more than a century

Jon Henley

24, Feb, 2021 @1:30 PM