Picasso prints stolen from Brazilian museum
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Friday, June 13, 2008
- 2 February 2010: Controversial Brazilian dam gets preliminary approval
- 3 January 2010: Death toll from Brazil mudslides rises to sixty
- 1 January 2010: At least eighteen dead after storms in Brazil
- 19 December 2009: Copenhagen climate conference ends with "meaningful agreement"
- 19 November 2009: Uruguay qualify to take last spot in 2010 FIFA World Cup
Four paintings were stolen in broad daylight from a branch of the Pinacoteca Museum located in São Paulo, Brazil. In this, the second high-scale art robbery in São Paulo in less then a year, the three armed robbers overpowered three unarmed museum guards before walking out with the paintings, frames and all, in two large bags.
The combined value of the four paintings has been put between US$568,400 and $612,000. The paintings were Pablo Picasso's "The Painter and the Model" and "Minotaur, Drinker and Women", both insured at $4,200, and two paintings by Emiliano Di Cavalcanti, "Women at the Window" insured at $500,000 and "Couple" insured at $60,000. All works stolen were owned by the Jose and Paulina Nemirovsky Foundation.
This comes just several months after a December 20 robbery in São Paulo in which another Picasso painting, as well as a painting by Candido Portinari, were stolen after-hours. The paintings were recovered January 8.
Sources
- Stan Lehman "Armed robbers steal Picasso prints in Brazil" – Associated Press, June 12, 2008
- "Thieves steal Picassos, Brazilian works from Sao Paulo museum" – Agence France-Presse, June 12, 2008
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