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GREECE RECOVERS PICASSO YEARS AFTER GALLERY HEIST: OFFICIALS

GREECE RECOVERS PICASSO YEARS AFTER GALLERY HEIST: OFFICIALS

Greece on Tuesday said it had recovered a Picasso painting personally donated by the Spanish master to the Greek people, almost a decade after it was stolen alongside two other artworks in an audacious heist at the National Gallery.

‘Head of a Woman’, gifted by Pablo Picasso to Greece in 1949, was recovered in Keratea, a rural area some 45 kilometres (28 miles) southeast of Athens, officials told a news conference.

“Today is a special day, (a day of) great joy and emotion,” Culture Minister Lina Mendoni told reporters.

Mendoni said the painting would have been “impossible” to sell as it had a personal inscription by Picasso on the back — “For the Greek people, a tribute by Picasso.”

The artist had given the cubist painting to the Greek state in recognition of the country’s resistance to Nazi Germany during a painful 1941-44 occupation.

“This painting is of particular importance and sentimental value to the Greek people, as it was personally dedicated by the great painter to the Greek people for their fight against fascist and Nazi forces,” she said.

Another painting stolen in the same heist in January 2012, ‘Stammer Windmill’ by Dutch painter Piet Mondrian, was also found.

The 2012 heist at the National Gallery, Greece’s largest state art collection, lasted just seven minutes.

It was originally believed that two men broke in, cutting the paintings from their frames.

But police have arrested just one person, a 49-year-old Greek man, in connection with the case.

A sketch by 16th-century Italian artist Guglielmo Caccia, better known as Moncalvo, was also stolen in the same robbery. But state television reported it was damaged in the heist and discarded.

A state report found that the National Gallery’s security had not been upgraded for over a decade, with the then police minister calling safeguards “non-existent.”

Several areas in the museum were out of range of security cameras, while the alarms were faulty and prone to ringing gratuitously.

In addition, the gallery was on reduced security staffing at the time owing to a three-day staff strike.

On the night of the heist, the burglar had set off an alarm by manipulating an unlocked door to send the sole guard elsewhere in the building.

The guard told police he ran after one thief, who dropped another Mondrian oil painting.

Source: National News Agency