“Indiana Jones of the World of Art helps the police to solve the famous painting secret from the museum in 1974
Dutch police say that 50 years ago, a Brueghel painting from a Polish museum has said they had broken the mysterious disappearance. Authorities say the case was finally resolved with the help of the art magazine journalists Well-known art detective.
The woman, a woman who is a woman, “Female Bongelist”, and the Flemish-Dutch master Pieter Brueghel was young in 1626, in the 1974 communist national museum in the communist.
He caused numerous rumors where he was – at that time, including the Polish Secret Service – a spy novel.
A total of 6.6 inches measuring a round drawing, it was thought to disappear forever.
However, the stolen drawing is currently the lock and key in a museum in Richard Bronswijk, Richard Bronswijk in the Dutch province of Dutch.
“We are 100% sure that in 1974, the same painting missing the National Museum in Gdansk,” Bronswijk told AFP.
“Indiana Jones of the World of Art”
Arthur brand, The well-known Dutch art detective, the suspicions were removed from the leading Dutch art magazine, the Dutch exhibition was removed from the leading Dutch art magazine.
“It does not appear in the last 40 years,” the drawing gave credit to the Gouda Museum, a special collection.
“Journal contribution, John Brozius, made some research and stumbled on an article on an old black-and-white Polish website,” he said.
Niklas Halle’n / through AFP Getty Images
“The article was about a theft in 1974, the theft in Gdansk, the stolen of two art works: ‘Crucifixion’, Anthony minibus DYCK and small painting has a small drawing Brugheghel sketch,” he said.
“Those who were ‘vind’ were not sure, this was very similar to the brueghele displayed in Gouda,” he said.
The drawing refer to a peasant woman, a peasant woman, a peasant woman with a peasant woman, which is a water-boiler, and in the other.
The cost of the drawing is not known, but Brueghel is generally selling small works by Cristie’s auction house in general.
The stolen pieces were called nicknamed “Indiana Jones” for high-profile ads, called for help.
“This is the match!”
In conjunction with the Dutch police, the brand examined the painting identity of the Museum in the Venlo region of South Holland.
The brand also drew Interpol’s database, which put the “database signal” for Brueghel drawings.
“The painting and screen listed by Interpol was one and the same,” he said.
“We checked and recreate, including information behind the painting. This is a match!” Bronswijk added.
Dutch police, Pronswijk reported that the Polish bodies will demand a request for legal assistance.
Neither the Dutch museums nor the Polish government was not available immediately.
Theft was discovered on April 24, 1974, the museum worker accidentally beat Brueghebel from a wall.
“Instead of the original work of the famous Flemish artist, a reproduction of a magazine,” Stolen Art Expert Mariusz Pilus wrote in 2019 in 2019.
A few days after the discovery, a Polish customs officer said that the Baltic’s Baltic Customs Officer, which reportedly exports illegal works through the Baltic port, was reported burning and killed.
Photo Deagostini / Getty Images
Polish reports said that the death of the customs officer and inspection of paintings, inspection of the chief, polish reports.
The Dutch police are now investigating how the painting ended in the Private Hollands collection.
Brand, Brueghebel said he would soon return to Gdansk, “Display, the museum, he hoped he could be returned in a museum.
The brand includes the success A vincent van gogh returns In 2023, painting to a museum was stolen after three years.
In 1973, he returned a Roman statue stolen from Musee DU in 1973.
In 2017, his art detective said “CBS mornings Broker deals With terrorist groups, shadowed characters were killed to watch the pieces in the mafia and the black market.
“On the one hand, there are police, insurance companies, collectors, and the other on the other hand, there are art thieves and fraud. Thus, I have revealed myself.”
contributed to this report.