The Greatest Art Heist in History: How the Mona Lisa Was Stolen from the Louvre (1911)

If you hap­pen to go to the Lou­vre to have a look at Leonar­do da Vin­ci’s Mona Lisa, you’ll find that you can’t get espe­cial­ly close to it. That owes in part to the ever-present crowd of cell­phone pho­tog­ra­phers, and more so to the paint­ing’s hav­ing been installed behind a wood­en bar­ri­er and encased in a stur­dy-look­ing glass box. These are suit­able pre­cau­tions, you might imag­ine, for the sin­gle most famous work of art in the world. But there was­n’t always so much secu­ri­ty, and indeed, nor was Mona Lisa always so dear­ly prized. A lit­tle more than a cen­tu­ry ago, you could just walk out of the Lou­vre with it.

You could do so, that is, pro­vid­ed you had a knowl­edge of the Lou­vre’s inter­nal oper­a­tions, the nerve to pluck a mas­ter­piece off its walls, and the will­ing­ness to spend a night in one of the muse­um’s clos­ets. Vin­cen­zo Perug­gia, an Ital­ian immi­grant who’d worked there as a clean­er and reframer of paint­ings, had all those qual­i­ties. On the evening of Sun­day, August 20th, 1911, Perug­gia entered the Lou­vre wear­ing one of its stan­dard-issue employ­ee coats. The next day, he emerged into an almost emp­ty muse­um, closed as it was to the pub­lic every Mon­day. You can find out what hap­pened next by watch­ing the Pri­mal Space video above, which visu­al­izes each step of the heist and its after­math.

Why did Perug­gia dare to steal the Mona Lisa in broad day­light, an act wor­thy of Arsène Lupin (him­self cre­at­ed just a few years ear­li­er)? Dis­cov­ered a cou­ple years lat­er, hav­ing hid­den the paint­ing in the false bot­tom of a trunk near­ly all the while, Perug­gia cast him­self as an Ital­ian patri­ot attempt­ing to return a piece of cul­tur­al pat­ri­mo­ny to its home­land. Anoth­er pos­si­bil­i­ty, elab­o­rat­ed upon in the video, is that he was noth­ing more than a pawn in a larg­er scheme mas­ter­mind­ed by the forg­er Eduar­do de Val­fier­no, who planned to make sev­er­al copies of the miss­ing mas­ter­piece and sell them to cred­u­lous Amer­i­can mil­lion­aires.

That, in any case, is what one Sat­ur­day Evening Post sto­ry report­ed in 1932, though it could well be that, in real­i­ty, Perug­gia act­ed alone, out of no high­er motive than a need for cash. (In a way, it would have been a more inter­est­ing sto­ry had the cul­prits actu­al­ly been Pablo Picas­so and Guil­laume Apol­li­naire, whose unre­lat­ed pos­ses­sion of stat­ues stolen from the Lou­vre drew police sus­pi­cion.) How­ev­er the heist occurred, it would­n’t have hap­pened if its object had­n’t already been wide­ly known, at least among art enthu­si­asts. But soon after La Gio­con­da was returned to her right­ful place, she became the face of art itself — and the rea­son muse­ums do things much dif­fer­ent­ly now than they did in the nine­teen-tens. The Lou­vre, you’ll notice, is now closed on Tues­days instead.

Relat­ed con­tent:

What Makes Leonardo’s Mona Lisa a Great Paint­ing?: An Expla­na­tion in 15 Min­utes

How the Mona Lisa Went From Being Bare­ly Known, to Sud­den­ly the Most Famous Paint­ing in the World (1911)

What Makes the Mona Lisa a Great Paint­ing: A Deep Dive

Why Leonar­do da Vinci’s Great­est Paint­ing is Not the Mona Lisa

How France Hid the Mona Lisa & Oth­er Lou­vre Mas­ter­pieces Dur­ing World War II

When Pablo Picas­so and Guil­laume Apol­li­naire Were Accused of Steal­ing the Mona Lisa (1911)

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. His projects include the Sub­stack newslet­ter Books on Cities and the book The State­less City: a Walk through 21st-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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  • Richard MacFarlane says:

    Greet­ings,

    I was a young fel­low, 15 years old, when we trav­elled as a stu­dent group from Cana­da, about 25 of us, to Switzer­land, Paris, France, Ger­many, and Lon­don, Eng­land. This was a French stu­dent tour. I dis­tinct­ly recall, in 1970, vis­it­ing the Lou­vre. The Mona Lisi paint­ing was hang­ing on a wall and the frame was a very dark felt pur­ple, slant­ed, almost bev­elled to the wall. The imme­di­ate area was roped off with 3 white ropes. And one French guard stood to the right, always, guard­ing the paint­ing. The paint­ing was hang­ing on a wall, not far from a cor­ri­dor which led to anoth­er part of the muse­um. It was a sort of focus before vis­i­tors walked through the cor­ri­dor, to the left. In 2001, I returned to the Lou­vre. What a dif­fer­ence! With our daugh­ter, we walked to the Mona Lisa, now encased in this huge light ship­yard grey frame box, under I pre­sume bul­let proof glass, with spot­lights. Such a pity but unfor­tu­nate­ly nec­es­sary. The orig­i­nal Mona Lisa, hang­ing from the wall, 1970, had nat­ur­al light to illu­mi­nate it. All I saw in 2001 was a large crowd of peo­ple from the Far East, lit­er­al­ly run­ning down the hall­way, stam­ped­ing to get close to the paint­ing. I had to life my daugh­ter on my shoul­ders, so she could try and see the price­less art. It was­n’t much fun. As vis­i­tors elbowed their way and con­stant­ly took iPhone flash pic­tures until the wall was blind­ed by flash­es, flash after flash pic­ture. So much has changed with tourism and vis­i­tor deco­rum. Every­one seems so focused on their own expe­ri­ence. Nev­er mind any­one else. It is a remark­able exam­ple of art. We are so for­tu­nate to see it. But how dimin­ished that sight, with the pro­tec­tive lay­er. Richard Mac­Far­lane, Toron­to, Cana­da

  • Glenn says:

    See “Mona Lisa Is Miss­ing”, a film by writer Joe Medieros. It can be found on YOUTUBE. This is the bet­ter film

  • Bridget Doman says:

    On a school trip to France in the sum­mer of 1965, much of our time was spent see­ing the var­i­ous sites of inter­est in Paris, although we did vis­it Fontainebleu and Ver­sailles. We were tak­en to the Lou­vre and saw the Mona Lisa, the area direct­ly in front being roped off. Some­one in our par­ty nick­named it the Moan­ing Lisa. Although we can remem­ber var­i­ous aspects of the trip, at 12/13, we were most­ly too young to take a great deal of notice of every­thing and 60 years is a long time to for­get much. Nev­er­the­less, it was an amaz­ing time and gave us the chance to use some of the French we had spent he pre­vi­ous school year learn­ing.

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