Stolen 500-Year-Old Painting Found In Naples Cupboard
A
500-year-old pain
The copy of
Salvator Mundi, which is believed to have been painted by Leonardo da Vinci,
was found in a bedroom cupboard in Naples on Saturday.
This copy is
thought to have been painted by one of da Vinci's students.
The
36-year-old owner of the flat was arrested on suspicion of receiving stolen
goods, police said.
"The
painting was found on Saturday thanks to a brilliant and diligent police operation,"
Naples prosecutor Giovanni Melillo told the AFP news agency.
The artwork
is usually part of the Doma Museum collection at the San Domenico Maggiore
church in the city.
But Mr
Melillo said officials were not aware it had been stolen because "the room
where the painting is kept has not been open for three months" due to the
coronavirus pandemic.
It is not
known when the artwork was taken as no one had reported it missing, but the
museum said it was in its possession as recently as last January
Police are
now investigating the circumstances of the theft, but there was no sign of a
break-in at the museum.
"It is
plausible that it was a commissioned theft by an organisation working in the
international art trade," Mr Melillo said.
It is not
known who painted the artwork, but some experts believe Leonardo's student
Giacomo Alibrandi may have done so in the early 1500s.
It shows
Christ with one hand raised, with the other holding a glass sphere.
And to add
to the mystery - whether or not the original painting is an authentic Leonardo
da Vinci is disputed. Leonardo died in 1519 and there are fewer than 20 of his
paintings in existence.
The original
Salvator Mundi has had major cosmetic surgery - its walnut panel base has been
described as "worm-tunnelled" and at some point it seems to have been
split in half. Efforts to restore it have also resulted in abrasions.
This did not
detract buyers, however, and the painting became the most expensive ever sold
when it was auctioned for a record $450m (£341m) in 2017.
The
unidentified buyer was involved in a bidding contest, via telephone, that
lasted nearly 20 minutes.
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