
Cézanne, Degas, van Gogh, Monet—could one go for bigger artists’ works to steal? In case you missed it, four legendary Impressionist works disappeared from the E.G. Bührle Collection in Zurich, Switzerland—in about 3 minutes—on Feb. 10, according to the
BBC,
NPR,
New York Times,
swissinfo. The estimated loss is $163.2 million, making the unfortunate event one of the biggest art heists the world has seen in 20 years.
The stolen paintings are:
Poppies near Vetheuil, by Claude Monet (1879);
Count Lepic and his Daughters, by Edgar Degas (1871);
Chestnut in Bloom, by Vincent van Gogh (1890);
and Boy in a Red Jacket, by Paul Cézanne (1888).
Click here for a virtual tour of the room where the four paintings used to hang.
UPDATE (2/20/08): Two paintings have been recovered.
Read more from NPR.