Botched heist: Thieves steal two Warhol prints and damage more at Dutch gallery

Botched heist: Thieves steal two Warhol prints and damage more at Dutch gallery

This morning, thieves blew open the door of an art gallery in the southern Netherlands and stole two works from a famous series of screen prints by American pop artist Andy Warhol.

They also left two more badly damaged in the street as they fled the scene of the botched heist.

Gallery owner Mark Peet Visser said the thieves attempted to steal all four works from a 1985 Warhol series called “Reigning Queens,” which features portraits of the then-queens of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Denmark and Swaziland.

Visser said the heist early Friday at MPV Gallery in the town of Oisterwijk was captured on security cameras, and called it “amateurish.”

“The bomb attack was so violent that my entire building was destroyed” and nearby stores were also damaged, he said. "So they did that part of it well - too well actually. And then they ran to the car with the artworks and it turns out that they won't fit in the car. At that moment the works are ripped out of the frames and you also know that they are damaged beyond repair, because it is impossible to get them out undamaged.”

A man takes picture at museum Paleis Het Loo in Apeldoorn, Netherlands on Wednesday 9 Oct. 2024 – prints similar to a Warhol work stolen from a gallery in Oisterwijk
A man takes picture at museum Paleis Het Loo in Apeldoorn, Netherlands on Wednesday 9 Oct. 2024 – prints similar to a Warhol work stolen from a gallery in Oisterwijk - AP Photo

Visser declined to put a value on the four signed and numbered works, which he had planned to offer for sale as a set at an art fair in Amsterdam later this month.

Last month, we reported that the Het Loo Palace Museum in the Netherlands was gearing up to host the exhibition of Andy Warhol’s 1985 'Reigning Queens' series, featuring 16 rare screen prints of the four monarchs Queen Elizabeth II, Queen Beatrix, Queen Margrethe II and Queen Ntombi Tfwala.

It was as billed as the last opportunity to view Warhol’s iconic series for at least five years, as the collection was set to be stored away in 2025 due to the fragility of the material.

The thieves got away with portraits of Elizabeth II and Margrethe II.

Police appealed for witnesses as forensic experts examined the badly damaged gallery.