Stolen: How the Mona Lisa Became the World’s Most Famous Painting
One hundred years ago, a heist by a worker at the Louvre secured Leonardo’s painting as an art world icon
- By James Zug
- Smithsonian.com, June 16, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Thanks to the high-profile heist, the Mona Lisa was now a global icon. Under a shower of even more publicity, it returned to the Louvre following mobbed exhibitions in Florence, Milan and Rome. In the first two days after it was rehung in the Salon Carré, more than 100,000 people viewed it. Today, eight million people see the Mona Lisa every year.
As soon as the painting was stolen in 1911, conspiracy theories sprouted up. Was it a hoax? Some said the theft was the French government’s way of trying to distract public opinion from uprisings in colonial West Africa. A few months before the painting was found, the New York Times speculated that Louvre restorers had botched a restoration job of the Mona Lisa; to cover this up, the museum concocted the story of an outlandish theft.
Even after the recovery of the Mona Lisa, the world was still incredulous. How could a few Italian carpenters have pulled this caper off by themselves? For years, rumors surfaced that a gang of international art thieves had poached the painting and substituted a fake that was in Perugia's possession when he was caught in Florence. In a 1932 issue of The Saturday Evening Post, Karl Decker, an American journalist, offered a twist: a shady Argentine swindler had arranged for six copies of the Mona Lisa to be made and sold after Perugia’s theft (each buyer thought he had the original).
Two English-language nonfiction accounts of the theft, a 1981 book by Seymour Reit and a 2009 retelling by R.A. Scotti, carry Decker’s story to the hilt, even though there is no supporting historical evidence.
A century has passed since Perugia pinched the painting, and yet historians are still reluctant to give him the credit as the unwitting catalyst for making the Mona Lisa the world-famous icon that it is today.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (7)
It should have a tight security
Posted by Bryan Ong on April 27,2013 | 02:42 AM
i love monalisaz pic and itz sooooo beautiful
Posted by valentina perera on September 30,2012 | 11:15 AM
Hi James, my name is Ron. In October of this year I made an accidental discovery while doing research for one of my painting projects. From what I know about art history and what stories seem to pop up on the internet, it would be considered a huge discovery – probably the biggest of it’s kind. I would love to tell my story, but I am not sure what steps to take in order to do so.
This discovery involves many renaissance paintings including those by Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Titian. Some of the famous works it involves are The Mona Lisa, The Last Supper, The Birth of Venus and The Sistine Chapel. I have looked all over for stories of my discovery, thinking that what I have uncovered must have been found and written about already, but there is nothing on record of this – neither in books nor anywhere on the internet. I am confident that this story will make its way through world news, considering the magnitude and popularity of smaller, similar stories.
I am still somewhat in shock about what I have found, knowing that this will answer many questions that art historians, scholars, and even scientists were only able to theorize about up until this point in time. This will also open up the doors to many new questions in the art world. I appreciate and welcome the opportunity to explain my discovery. I can be reached by email or phone. Thank you.
Ron
Posted by Ron P on November 8,2011 | 01:34 PM
nice article - but Guillame Apollinaire was mainly a poet, not a critic.
Posted by Filip on August 21,2011 | 04:02 AM
That's a great story really. Who would've thought that world's finest painting ever made has to gone through such a torrid time. But that time no one knew that its gonna be that important artifact in the coming time.Enjoyed reading it.
Posted by Mathew Leonard on July 11,2011 | 09:16 AM
Where can I see your documentary on this fascinating story. Kindly keep me posted.
Posted by John Heyn on July 1,2011 | 09:43 AM
This August I'll be releasing a documentary called "The Missing Piece" about Vincenzo Peruggia (spelled with 2 g's) and the true story of his theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre. I've spent several years researching thousands of documents in the Paris and Florence archives and feature in my film Celestina Peruggia, Vincenzo's only child. In fact, with the help of her two children Silvio and Graziella, I bring to Celestina the real reason her father stole the painting. And it had nothing to do with Decker's fictional Valfierno. www.monalisamissing.com
Posted by Joe Medeiros on June 23,2011 | 04:11 PM