-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
To send light into the darkness of men’s hearts – such is the duty of the artist. ~Schumann
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Hearts and Minds Poetry Denise Levertov Holbrook AZ Lightroom 3 Bird Carl Sandburg Van Gogh Olivier Beaudoin Trinity Art Conference White Winter Hymnal Brooklyn Americana Cristians In The Visual Arts Nathan Sawaya Flirtation Michael Kenna Katja Mater Pane e tulipani Macmillan Art Rachel Zucker Poverty Sky King Ted Kooser Hardly Art Legos Alela Diane Trinity Arts Conference Afghanistan Jane Kenyon paper sculpture New Video Billy Collins by Madeleine L'Engle Acadamy Awards Chip Cain Dennis Sampson Children in a Field Glass art Africa Bamian caves Animals Bob Dylan John F. Kennedy POW 1 Question Perfecr Suite 6 Girl London John Bisbee Cezanne Jon Pineda Animated Poetry Vespers Flickr PBS Jewish Sigur Rós Word Arizona Sunsets Biblical art Jack Smart Love In Black And White Philip Larkin 50 People Donald Hall If It Be Your Will Boy Reading Square Halo Kevin Young Peggy Noonan Bonnie Ferrill Roman Shadow art National Poetry Month musician weaving John Donne Sunsets Jess Lopez-King Monet MOMA Pixie Foudre The search Wordle Daniel Hoffman The Shadow Train Station Flower Katrina Western Sunsets Photo Contest Earth Day Michael Nichols Mark Doty John Keats Marc Chagall Piano Alistair Heseltine Samuel Bak The Lone Ranger Rilke Robert Frost Alice N. Persons New York Rhina P. Espaillat Photocrati Pencil Art Ottawa Netflix Nail Art Biscuit Makato Fujimura Snow Environment Japanese Artist Holocaust Harriet Tubman Wire Sculpture Poet Laureate Random Art H. PALMER HALL Black History Animated Short Tina Dico Vladimir Tatlin Everyman Photo Contest Art Theft. Robert Burns Find Work Sunset Winds Fractals At The End Of Paths Not Taken Ethics in Photography Dale Chihuly The Air That I Breathe Self Image Arthur and Yu Dance Boy and Girl Sunset Scotland Walker Percy Backwards Portrait Mark Strand Nature Emily Dickinson Family Ocean Waves Silent Music onOne An Wine Cisco Kid In Camera Cara Barer Film Posters Pablo Neruda Peter Callesen Bryce Alan Flurie Color J Tillman Art Conference Larry Norman B&W Ben Zion A SONNET FOR NAPALM Webb Sisters Nick Brandt Nancy Henry memories Angela Mellor Beach Sharon Chmielarz Camera Toss Degas Count To Ten Creative Textures Text Art William Blake photography Ocean Word Art One Simple Question Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens Leonard Cohen Roger Mitchell Mathew's House Project Kindly Olga's Gallery Love Birthday Facebook sculpture New Yourk City Pause Evaporation Christian Rock Troy DeArmitt New Water Seagull.To Win WineKIng Galleries Prisoner of words Green Living Player Piano Kathleen Adcock Rita Dove Robert Hayden Ox Cart Man Terry Evans Wendell Berry Bread and Tulips OTR Poetry Out Loud Robert Haas White As Diamonds Video Black and White Georges Rouault Typolution Floyd Skloot Water Hyacinth Music They Sit Together on the Porch Mixed Media Film Kelli Russell Agodon Otherwise Dylan Covers WILLIAM AARNES I See Math Old Time Radio Ed Knippers Naomi Shihab Nye Makoto Fujimura Silent World William Stafford The List Louise Gluck Calvin College Cowboy Junkies I Shall Be Released Mary Louise Parker Scholastics books Paperclay basketry Alicia Keys The Shirt Hiram Larew Body Image Kumi Yamashita Angela Shaw And As If The Rain John Leax Dillon Gallery William Doreski NEA The Streets The Fat Man Foreign Films Oscars Waiting Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Movie Psalm 34:8 Lane Smith Fleet Foxes Susan Springer Paper Cutting Art and Christianity Short Film National Geographic Theodore Roethke Jennifer Maestre Science Interview Wendy Cope Bianca Rossini James Deahl
Tag Archives: Degas
Monet, Van Gogh, Degas and Cezanne Stolen: Worth 163 million

The New York Times has reported that “Three thieves, wearing dark clothes and ski masks, walked into the Emile Bührle Foundation, a private collection housed a couple of miles outside of Zurich’s city center on the shore of Lake Zurich, around 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, a short while before the museum was due to close. The collection is considered to be one of the biggest privately owned collections of French impressionists in the world.”
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation puts losses from art and cultural property crime at $6 billion a year. The biggest U.S. art heist was of some $300 million of Rembrandts and other works stolen from Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, in 1990, according to the FBI Web site.
It is sad that the art has been stolen and taken out of the public forum and adding insult to injury it was for the investment they represent and not the artistic works they are that they were stolen. We can only hope the thieves and the art are found soon.

Recent Comments