[CPProt.net] Munch's "The Scream" apparently undamaged in theft

Museum Security and Cultural Property Protection (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Wed Jan 18 06:36:47 CET 2006


Munch's "The Scream" apparently undamaged in theft
Reuters

OSLO - Edvard Munch's masterpiece "The Scream" was apparently undamaged in a
2004 robbery but the less well-known "Madonna" suffered a minor tear, a man
accused in connection with the theft said on Monday.

"The paintings weren't wrecked in the robbery," Thomas Nataas told Reuters
of the two works stolen by gunmen from Oslo's Munch Museum in August 2004
and then stashed for several weeks in a bus owned by Nataas on farmland
north of Oslo.

"I saw there was what looked like an insignificant tear (in "Madonna")," he
said. "The other ("The Scream") looked in okay condition." He said he had
not inspected the works closely after stumbling across them.

Art experts had feared the works, painted by Munch, a Norwegian, in 1893,
were badly damaged when the thieves ripped off the wooden frames and threw
them out of the windows of a getaway car, apparently fearing the frames
might be embedded with a satellite tracking device.

Nataas, 35, is due to go on trial next month charged with handling stolen
goods. Five other men are accused of planning the theft and stealing the
paintings, which have not been recovered.

"I am innocent," Nataas said, adding he only found the paintings in plastic
bags after noticing that someone had broken into the bus.

Separately, he told Norway's TV2 independent television channel that he had
been scared to report his find to the police, fearing that criminals might
somehow take revenge on him. He said he knew one of the other accused men.

Nataas said police had bungled an attempt to seize the paintings when the
robbers moved them to a new hiding place on September 24, 2004.

He said police had been tapping his phone when one of the accused called
Nataas several days in advance to say they would collect the paintings.
Police charge that Nataas wrapped up the paintings ready for collection.

"I don't know why the police didn't come and pick up the paintings. They had
full control," he said.

"The Scream" portrays a terrified waif-like figure under a blood-red sky. It
has become an icon of angst after a century scarred by horrors including the
atom bomb and the Holocaust.

"Madonna" shows a mysterious bare-breasted woman with long flowing black
hair.





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