Many years ago I examined the theft of the Mona Lisa in this blog. So now let us re-examine the most famous painting in the universe, by Leonardo da Vinci in 1503-16, to reveal a different motive from the one provided back in 2012.
Vincenzo Peruggia (above) stole his beloved Mona Lisa (below)
from the Louvre in 1911.
from the Louvre in 1911.
In the morning, before the museum opened to the public, the man crept out, clad in the white apron uniform of Louvre employees. He grabbed the C16th oil painting from its location on the wall, carried it to a service stairs, removed the painting from its glass frame and wrapped it in a white sheet. Before he was able to remove the locked stair-door and escape, he was met by a plumber also using the stairs. With uncanny luck, the workman assumed the brazen burglar was a fellow employee who needed help. The imposter thanked the employee and exited, with the hidden painting.
Guards noticed that the painting was missing but assumed it was moved by staff. But the day after, when French artist Louis Béroud visited the museum to sketch his Mona Lisa au Louvre, he found only 4 iron pegs where the painting had hung. The Louvre was securely shut down!! To investigate the loss, detectives dusted for prints and rigorously questioned museum staff (all cleared). The only clue was the painting’s glass frame, discarded in the stairwell!
Checkpoints were set up to search pedestrians and cars, the French border was sealed and departing ships and trains searched. By the time the museum re-opened 9 days later, the theft was front-page news internationally. When the museum eventually reopened, thousands poured in the doors to gaze on the empty wall space. The investigation found 2 high-profile suspects. They arrested Guillaume Apollinaire in Sept, after linking the French poet to the earlier theft of two statuettes which his secretary stole from the Louvre. During the interrogation, Apollinaire linked another high-profile suspect to the case: Pablo Picasso, who had purchased the stolen statues in order to use them as models for his work. Police questioned both about the Mona Lisa theft, but they were cleared.
2 years later, Florentine art dealer Alfredo Geri received a letter in the mail. Postmarked from Paris, the sender was someone who signed the letter as Leonard. The writer claimed he was responsible for the theft of the Mona Lisa, and that he wished to see the masterpiece back on Italian soil. Geri contacted Giovanni Poggi, Director of Uffizi Gallery. The pair doubted the letter’s reliability, but thought they should proceed with the offer presented in the letter. Geri invited the man to Florence, and the three soon met in the writer’s hotel room. An object wrapped in red silk was produced, and respectfully placed upon the bed. The Florentines starred in disbelief: it was the Mona Lisa!
The painting was taken to Uffizi, and the man’s asking price of 500,000 lire was agreed to. But Geri & Poggi never meant to pay the ransom for da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. Instead the painting was authenticated and the police called.
11th Dec 1913, the Italian immigrant Leonard was arrested at his Florentine hotel room. Vincenzo Peruggia was a former Louvre employee who had actually built Mona Lisa’s glass case. Peruggia knew the museum practices, making him the perfect candidate for his art heist. [But how did no record at the Louvre include his name?]
Now here is the surprising bit. Peruggia was hailed as a national hero by the Italian people. In my first post I had said that Peruggia believed that the Mona Lisa had been stolen from Florence by Napoleon. Thus the thief was only doing his patriotic duty, by returning the painting to its true home in Italy. But we need to remember that Mona Lisa had never been part of Napoleon’s art collection.
Rather Benjamin Evemy showed that Peruggia had kept the Mona Lisa in his flat in outer Paris, hidden in the false bottom of a wooden steamer trunk. As Mona Lisa’s keeper, Peruggia said he fell in love with her smile and feasted his eyes on his treasure every night. It was a sexual and nationalist love, with nothing at all to do with Napoleon.
Many Italians really did joyously welcome Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece back home to the Uffizi and the Borghese Galleries, Villa Medici, Farnese Palace and the Brera Museum. It was a triumphal tour of Italy, so clearly many Italians agreed with Peruggia.
Peruggia received to 13 months in prison, but ended up serving only 7 months. Due to the excellent relations between Italy and France, Poggi was allowed to exhibit the painting in the Uffizi until Jan 1914, along with two other masterpieces of the artist from da Vinci: The Annunciation and Adoration of the Magi. Then the Mona Lisa returned to the Louvre, and in the first days following its re-installation, c120,000 thankful Frenchmen visited the museum.
The Louvre welcomed the star painting home, Paris 1914
New York Times
The sensation caused by the theft greatly helped to boost this painting’s public reputation and to cement its place in the collective consciousness of Italian and French art lovers and others.
Read The Art Inquirer, August 2011 and Great Art Heists of History, in Mutual Art, June 2021.