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From Monalisa to Van Gough Museum: 5 most infamous art thefts in history

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 4, 2025, 13:24 IST
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From Monalisa to Van Gough Museum: 5 most infamous art thefts in history

Art can be more than decoration - for many, it’s a piece of human history, culture, and emotional memory. When priceless artworks disappear, the loss is not only financial but cultural and emotional also. Some art thefts have shocked the world, revealing how vulnerable even the most prestigious museums are. According to various sites, the following five heists stand out for their boldness, audacity, and lasting impact - reminding us that some treasures, once stolen, might never return.

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The 1911 Theft of the Mona Lisa (Louvre, Paris)

In perhaps the most famous art heist ever, on August 21, 1911, Italian handyman Vincenzo Peruggia - a former Louvre employee - simply walked out with Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, hiding the painting under his coat. The masterpiece remained missing for over two years, during which the Louvre’s most iconic painting became an even larger global sensation. Though recovered in 1913, the heist cemented the Mona Lisa’s mystique and exposed museum vulnerabilities worldwide.

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Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist (Boston, 1990)

On March 18, 1990, two thieves dressed as police officers entered Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, tied up the guards, and stole 13 works of art - including masterpieces by Rembrandt and Vermeer - in 81 minutes. It remains the largest unsolved art theft in U.S. history. Empty frames still hang in the museum as a haunting reminder of what was lost. Despite decades of investigation, none of the stolen works have been recovered.

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2002 Van Gogh Museum Theft (Amsterdam)

In December 2002, thieves broke into Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum by scaling walls and smashing a window, stealing two early paintings by Vincent van Gogh: View of the Sea at Scheveningen and Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen. The bold burglary highlighted how even modern, high-security museums can be vulnerable. The paintings were recovered in 2016 in Italy, but the theft remains a stark reminder of the risks faced by cultural institutions worldwide.

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Green Vault Heist (Dresden, 2019)

In November 2019, thieves broke into the Grünes Gewölbe (Green Vault) museum in Dresden, Germany - one of Europe’s oldest and richest royal treasure chambers. They stole 21 pieces of 18th-century jewellery, including diamond-encrusted royal artefacts - items described by museum officials as having “immeasurable worth.” The audacious early-morning theft exposed serious security flaws and dealt a grave blow to European cultural heritage.

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Ghent Altarpiece (Belgium)

Created in the 15th century by Hubert and Jan van Eyck, the Ghent Altarpiece (also known as The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb) is an iconic masterpiece of early Northern Renaissance art. Over centuries, it has been stolen or looted at least seven times - by Calvinists, Napoleonic armies, art dealers, and during WWII by the Nazis - making it perhaps the most stolen major artwork in history. Even now one of the panels is missing and this is a silent mute witness to the powerlessness of art in the face of war, greed, and time.

The most notorious art thefts in the world tell a lot more than bold robberies - they are the signs of the great attachment of the people to the culture, past, and art. Every stolen masterpiece symbolises not only money, but also a part of our common heritage. These high-profile thefts have made museums reconsider security, prompting governments to enhance international collaboration, and made ordinary people aware of the vulnerability of cultural treasures. Some of the works have been retrieved, but there is still a lot that has been lost and this is what has kept on creating mystery, fascination, and hope. These heists demonstrate that art - with all of its beauty - can be so desirable that it is defended, stolen, and desired and sought after at all times.
All Images Credit: Getty Images

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Copyright © Jun 2, 2026, 02.22PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service