CNN
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Video footage shows how a sledgehammer-wielding thief broke into a museum in the Netherlands and walked off with a painting by Vincent van Gogh.
“The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring” was stolen from the Singer Laren museum in the town of Laren, just outside Amsterdam, on March 30, and the footage shows the suspect arriving outside the museum on a motorbike.
Viewers can see the thief smashing through two glass doors with a sledgehammer, and later leaving with the artwork under their right arm.
The thief had to bypass other security systems to reach the painting, a spokeswoman for Dutch police told CNN on Thursday, but investigators have decided not to release that footage at this stage.
Opsporing Verzocht/YouTube
The burglar can be seen smashing two glass doors to enter the museum.
No arrests have been made and the painting is still missing, said the spokeswoman.
Dutch police tweeted that they received 56 tips as a result of the broadcast, which went out on a crime show on the NPO2 channel Wednesday.
CNN has contacted the Singer Laren museum, which is currently closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, for comment on the footage.
JEAN-PIERRE MULLER/AFP/Getty Images
In 1911, Leonardo Da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" was stolen from the Louvre by an Italian who had been a handyman for the museum. The now-iconic painting was recovered two years later.
courtesy Art Recovery
A statue called "Young Girl With Serpent" by Auguste Rodin was stolen from a home in Beverly Hills, California, in 1991. It was returned after someone offered it on consignment to Christie's auction house. Rodin, a French sculptor considered by some aficionados to have been the father of modern sculpture, lived from 1840 until 1917. His most famous work, "The Thinker," shows a seated man with his chin on his hand.
AFP/Getty Images
Picasso's "La Coiffeuse" ("The Hairdresser") was discovered missing in 2001 and was recovered when it was shipped from Belgium to the United States in December 2014. The shipper had listed the item as a $37 piece of art being sent to the United States as a Christmas present.
ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP/Getty Images
Italy's Culture Ministry unveils two paintings by the French artists Paul Gauguin and Pierre Bonnard on April 2, 2014. The paintings were stolen from a family house in London in 1970, abandoned on a train and then later sold at a lost-property auction, where a factory worker paid 45,000 Italian lira for them -- roughly equivalent to 22 euros ($30) at the time.
PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images
A 19th-century Renoir painting was stolen from a US museum in 1951 and then bought at a flea market in 2010. A judge later ruled that it to be returned to the museum. The 5½-by-9-inch painting, titled "Landscape on the Banks of the Seine," was bought for $7 at a flea market by a Virginia woman.
Courtesy Interpol
Seven famous paintings
were stolen from the Kunsthal Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, in 2012, including two Claude Monet works, "Charing Cross Bridge, London" and "Waterloo Bridge." The other paintings, in oil and watercolor, were Picasso's "Harlequin Head," Henri Matisse's "Reading Girl in White and Yellow," Lucian Freud's "Woman with Eyes Closed," Paul Gauguin's "Femme devant une fenêtre ouverte, dite la Fiancee" and Meyer de Haan's "Autoportrait."
New York County DA Office
A Salvador Dali painting stolen from a Manhattan art gallery by a man posing as a potential customer
in 2012. It was later intercepted by customs police after it was sent back to the United States from Greece.
Courtesy wga.hu
In 1473, Hans Memling's "The Last Judgment" was stolen by pirates and became the first documented art theft.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Adam Worth, the inspiration for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's diabolical character Moriarty, stole "Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire," painted by Thomas Gainsborough in 1876.
REUTERS/Chris Pizzello /Landov
The Nazis plundered countless precious artworks during World War II, including "Adele Bloch-Bauer I," by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt, which was confiscated from the owner as he fled Austria.
REUTERS /PHILIP SEARS /LANDOV
Many works of art that were taken by the Nazis were never recovered. Others were returned after years of legal battles. "Christ Carrying the Cross," by Italian artist Girolamo de' Romani, was returned to its owner's family in 2012.
REUTERS/Handout /Landov
A version of Edvard Munch's "The Scream" was one of two paintings by the artist to be stolen from the Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway, in 2004.
The painting – created by the Dutch master in 1884 – was on loan from another art institution, the Groninger Museum in the city of Groningen. A police statement at the time said that the theft took place at around 3:15 a.m. local time, and that intruders entered the premises by breaking through a glass door.
“I am shocked and unbelievably pissed off,” museum director Jan Rudolph de Lorm said during a press conference on March 30. “It is very bad for the Groninger Museum. It’s also very bad for Singer.”
“But above all it is horrible for all of us, because art is there to be seen and shared by all of us, for society as a whole, to bring enjoyment, to bring inspiration, and also to bring comfort. Especially in this difficult time,” he added.
The painting was created in the town of Nuenen, where Van Gogh stayed with his parents between 1883 and 1885. It depicts the garden of the parsonage they lived in and where his father served as pastor. It also shows the ruins of an old church that featured in a number of other Van Gogh works from the period.
Police said that painting has now been added to Interpol’s stolen art database.
The Singer Laren museum announced its temporary closure on March 13, shortly after the country’s government announced a ban on large gatherings and shuttered the Van Gogh Museum and Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.