Paal Enger, who stole Munch's 'The Scream,' is dead at 57
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, September 13, 2024


Paal Enger, who stole Munch's 'The Scream,' is dead at 57
Edvard Munch’s “The Scream,” at the National Museum in Oslo, Norway, June 7, 2022. (David B. Torch/The New York Times)

by Alex Williams



NEW YORK, NY.- Paal Enger, a rising prospect for a celebrated Norwegian soccer club who traded a game that he loved for another — art theft — that he absolutely relished, culminating in his infamous 1994 heist of Edvard Munch’s masterpiece “The Scream,” died June 29 in Oslo. He was 57.

His death was confirmed by Nils Christian Nordhus, an Oslo-based lawyer who formerly represented Enger. Nordhus did not provide any more details.

Enger, who was born in Oslo on March 26, 1967, rose from the junior system of Vaalerenga, a five-time champion of Norway’s top-level league, now known as Eliteserien, and in 1985 made his debut with the club.

As a youth, he was a fan of the Argentine soccer star Diego Maradona. But his real hero, according to a 2021 profile in The Athletic, was Don Vito Corleone, the fictional crime boss played by Marlon Brando in “The Godfather.” Enger was so immersed in Mafia lore that when he was 15, he flew to New York to see for himself the locations where the Academy Award-winning “Godfather” films were shot.

By then, he was no stranger to the world of life outside the law. “I grew up in Tveita, on the east side of Oslo, and people there don’t have much money,” he said in an interview last year with the British tabloid The Sun. “We started doing crime when we were very young and I found it exciting. I carried on because I enjoyed it very much.”

Graduating from boosting candy to cracking safes and blowing up automated teller machines with neighborhood friends, he proved a phenom in athletics and crime.

His outlaw alter ego was no secret to his teammates, who noticed that he threw away his tracksuits after every practice rather than wash them, and that he frequently showed up in luxury cars that were far beyond a teenager’s budget. “I remember once he popped up with a BMW 735i,” one former teammate told The Athletic. “He liked to steal expensive cars, there’s no doubt about it.”

Despite his taste for larceny, most on the squad considered Enger a model teammate, even as his pursuits beyond the law had him living like a superstar. “I did so much crime in my 20s,” he told The Sun, “that I had everything — cars, boats, money, the most beautiful women in Oslo. But I wanted more.”

Specifically, he wanted one of his nation’s crown jewels. “The Scream,” which has been called Norway’s “Mona Lisa,” is one of the most recognizable — and reproduced — paintings in the world.

Munch, known for haunting expressionist paintings that explored themes including sexuality and madness, actually made four versions of “The Scream,” two rendered in paint and two in pastel and crayon. The only one in private hands, an 1895 pastel, sold at auction in 2012 for nearly $120 million to financier Leon Black.

Carrying emotional scars from his childhood with a violent stepfather, Enger found a kindred spirit in the agonized howling of the painting’s ghostly subject, an expression of personal anguish as well as a broader existential dread.

“My obsession with this picture started the first time I saw it,” Enger said in “The Man Who Stole ‘The Scream,’” a documentary released last year. “As soon as I got close to the picture, I got an extraordinary feeling. Of anxiety. Strange things in my head. I had such an intense connection with ‘The Scream’ right away. And it’s never left me.”

Having grown accustomed to just taking anything he desired, he decided that the famous painting should be no exception.

In 1988, Enger, accompanied by his friend and longtime partner in crime Bjorn Grytdal, slipped through a window at the Munch Museum in Oslo to steal a version of “The Scream.” But a hitch in their plan led them instead to snatch another Munch masterwork, “Love and Pain,” also known as “Vampire.”

“The disappointment lasted days,” Enger later recalled, “but then it started to become fun.” In part, that was because he kept the painting hidden in the ceiling of a pool hall he owned that was frequented by off-duty police officers.

“They don’t know it’s hanging just one meter from them,” he added. “That was the best feeling. We let them play for free just to have them there.”

The amusement ended when his accomplice let word slip to a neighbor who was a police informant. Enger spent four years in prison for the theft, effectively ending any hope of soccer glory.

Even so, his ambition burned. He turned his sights back to his muse and quarry.

On Feb. 12, 1994, Norway’s attention — along with considerable law enforcement resources — was focused on the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer.

Enger took advantage of the distraction. He and an accomplice clambered up a ladder outside the National Gallery in Oslo, smashed a window and slipped in — and within 50 seconds, The Athletic reported, slipped out with the museum’s version of “The Scream,” which at the time was valued at about $55 million.

The thieves left behind the ladder, their wire cutters and a note: “A thousand thanks for your poor security.”

Given his history, Enger was an obvious suspect. Still, he knew that the police had nothing on him, so he began taunting them, calling with false leads.

“I don’t think I really understood completely how much it meant for the National Gallery, the police and everyone,” he later said. “I made a fool of them on national TV.”

The stymied authorities eventually reached out to Scotland Yard, which dispatched Charles Hill, a detective from the London police’s art and antiques unit, to Norway. Hill, posing as a representative of the J. Paul Getty Museum in California, expressed interest in buying “The Scream” from an art dealer who was connected to Enger.

Despite misgivings over the highly unlikely scenario that a prestigious museum would shell out for a stolen masterpiece, Enger dispatched Grytdal, one of his accomplices in the theft, to pursue a deal.

“I felt, ‘Maybe I have had it long enough,” Enger later recalled. “Maybe just drop all those dreams I had of the game to come. I was totally sure the police had almost no evidence against me, so the only one they could arrest was Bjorn.”

That too proved a highly unlikely scenario. Three months after the theft, police arrested Enger, Grytdal and two other accomplices.

Enger once said that he had “four children with four different mothers from four countries.” Information on survivors was not immediately available.

In 1996, Enger was sentenced to six years and three months in prison, where he took up painting, taking stylistic inspiration from his artistic hero.

After his release, he established an art career of his own. In 2011, his abstract paintings were exhibited at a gallery in Norway.

Still, he did not go clean. In 2015, he was charged with stealing 17 paintings from an Oslo gallery.

This is not to say that he was wholly averse to acquiring art by legitimate means. In 2001, he bought an unsigned Munch lithograph at auction for about $3,000.

Leaving the auction house that day, he ran into the former head of security for the National Gallery. “Congratulations,” he told Enger. “It’s great that you’ve actually bought a Munch — much better than stealing one.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

July 6, 2024

A masterpiece of fiction inspires the urge to submerge in a gallery crawl

This bigheaded fossil turned up in a place no one expected to find it

Piñatas that provide awe instead of candy

Paal Enger, who stole Munch's 'The Scream,' is dead at 57

Inaugural auction featuring selections from William Strutz's celebrated library realizes $5.65 million at Heritage

The dazzling artistry of Hiroshige's '100 Famous Views of Edo'

Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg opens first institutional exhibition in Germany of works by Firelei Báez

The man behind the Muppets

How the Denisovans survived the Ice Age

John Waters' Baltimore

Museo Picasso Málaga to show a large-format installation by the South African artist William Kentridge

Nara Roesler opens 'Co(r)respondences: Constructive Affinities/Painting as Surface'

Heritage's July Entertainment Auction offers out of this world spaceships, costumes and artwork

The best documentaries of 2024, so far

Ordrupgaard to open an exhibition of works by British artist Flora Yukhnovich

Sculptural fashion and body-related art in the TextielMuseum this November

Exhibition challenges our perceptions of interconnectedness and transformation within the natural world

Heritage's Historical Platinum Signature Auction spans Beethoven and Napoleon to Neil Armstrong and Harry Potter

Celebrated Ruth Nelkin collection of Japanese woodblock prints brings $2.2 million at Heritage Auctions

How big is Taylor Swift by the numbers?

Netflix show earns its Saudi creator plaudits, and a prison sentence

A Jewish teen's diary recounts pain and resilience in a Nazi ghetto

Australian designer Martin Grant gifts more than 200 designs to NGV

International judge announced for The Walters Prize 2024

Protect Your Roof with Effective Roof Coating Solutions




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful