Wed, Mar 09, 2005 - Page 6 News List

Norwegian police recover Munch works after heist

POPULAR ARTIST Just months after two Edvard Munch masterpieces were stolen from a museum, ne'er-do-wells attempted to nab three more works

AP , OSLO, NORWAY

Three works of art by Norwegian master Edvard Munch -- including a unique watercolor entitled Blue Dress -- were recovered less than 24 hours after thieves with crowbars pried them loose from a restaurant's walls, police said.

Authorities also made several arrests in the capital on Monday, including several known criminals, police spokesman Iver Stensrud said.

He declined to say how many were detained or give details about the condition of the stolen watercolor and two lithographs while the investigation was still pending.

"We can say the artwork has been recovered," he said. "It was just good police work."

Munch's tortured tableaus have proven to be quite a draw for Norway's art thieves. In August, priceless Munch masterpieces The Scream and Madonna were stolen from a museum with guards. They have yet to be recovered.

The three pieces stolen Sunday night from the restaurant at the upscale Hotel Refnes were valued at a total of about US$257,000.

The most valuable -- the 1915 watercolor Blue Dress -- is worth as much as US$160,857, Munch expert and auctioneer Knut Forsberg said.

The other two are lithographs include a self-portrait and a portrait of Swedish artist August Strindberg.

Munch developed an emotionally charged painting style that helped launch the 20th Century Expressionist movement. He died in 1944 at the age of 80, having produced some 1,700 paintings and 30,000 prints.

The hotel's owner, Widar Salbuvik, said the thieves used crowbars to pry the artwork off the walls of the restaurant just after it had closed for the night. The hotel is near the city of Moss, about 50km south of Oslo.

A hotel worker was walking through the restaurant around 11pm Sunday and surprised two unarmed men who had torn the pictures and frames from their special security mounts on the walls, police spokesman Jan Pedersen said.

"They dropped one, and broke the frame and glass, but took the picture," Pedersen said. Police were searching for two dark-haired men believed to be in their 20s, he said.

The August theft of The Scream and Madonna from the Munch Museum raised concerns about security in the art world, as three armed robbers grabbed the valuable pieces in broad daylight.

In 1994, another version of The Scream was stolen from the National Gallery in Oslo and was recovered a few months later in a sting operation.

Pedersen and Stensrud separately dismissed any immediate claims that the two recent thefts were linked.

"There are no grounds for assuming any connection between the thefts, but we will be talking to the Oslo police about it."

"It seems to be a fashion among criminals to steal Munch," the hotel owner Salbuvik said.

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