Dutch 'Indiana Jones' recovers stolen Van Gogh masterpiece
The painting, 'Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring', was burgled from the Singer Laren Museum near Amsterdam on March 30, 2020.
A Dutch art detective has recovered a precious Vincent van Gogh painting that was stolen from a museum in a daring midnight heist during the coronavirus lockdown three-and-a-half years ago, police said.
Arthur Brand took possession of the missing painting, the 1884 "Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring", worth between three and $3.2 million (six million euros), at his Amsterdam home on Monday, stuffed in a blue IKEA bag.
Brand, dubbed the "Indiana Jones of the Art World" for tracing a series of high-profile lost artworks, said that confirming the painting was the stolen Van Gogh was "one of the greatest moments of my life."
"Arthur Brand, in cooperation with the Dutch police, has solved this matter," Richard Bronswijk of the Dutch police arts crime unit confirmed to the AFP news agency.
"This is definitely the real one, there's no doubt about it."
Brand said that frequent calls by him and the Dutch police to hand back the stolen artwork finally paid off when a man, whose identity was not revealed for his own safety, handed Brand the painting in a blue IKEA bag, covered with bubble-wrap and stuffed in a pillow casing.
A video clip supplied by Brand showed him unpacking the painting in his lounge and gasping in astonishment when he realised what it was.
"I couldn't believe it," he said.
Mysterious man hands back artwork
The painting was burgled from the Singer Laren Museum near Amsterdam on March 30, 2020 in a heist that made headlines around the world.
Dutch police released video images shortly after the burglary showing a thief smashing through a glass door in the middle of the night, before running out with the painting tucked under his right arm.
In April 2021, police arrested a man named in Dutch media as Nils M. for the theft. He was later convicted and sentenced to eight years behind bars.
M. was also convicted for stealing another masterpiece by Frans Hals called "Two Laughing Boys" in a separate heist.
"After a few months I heard from a source in the criminal world who had bought the Van Gogh," from Nils M, said Brand, who has gained fame for his remarkable recoveries of stolen art, including the "Hitler's Horses" bronze statues, a Picasso painting and a ring that once belonged to Oscar Wilde.
This man, identified by Dutch media as Peter Roy K., was currently behind bars for a separate case involving the large-scale import and export of cocaine, Brand said.
K. wanted to use the painting as collateral to negotiate a reduction in his sentence.
Brand confirmed Peter Roy K.'s identity, stressing he had said before that "no deal for a reduced sentence would be made."
The whereabouts of the Van Gogh, however, remained a mystery until two weeks ago when a mysterious man contacted Brand saying he wanted to return it.
After some negotiation, Brand persuaded the man — who had "nothing to do with the theft", according to the art detective — to hand back the artwork.
"In an operation done in close coordination with the Dutch police, we got the painting back," he said.
Frans Hals' "Two Laughing Boys" remains missing, but Brand said he hoped that painting would also be returned soon.