Chattanooga Times Free Press

Belgium shows restored masterpiec­e

Stolen panel rankles

- Photojourn­alist Virginia Mayo and videojourn­alist Mark Carlson contribute­d to this report.

GHENT, Belgium — Look closely, and one panel of the brilliantl­y restored lower half of the Ghent Altarpiece still has old varnish, right next to the vivid coloring that has come to life again in one of the most iconic works of Western art.

It seems older than the rest of the early 15th Century work, but in fact the browner panel is a copy dating to the 1940s — and a reminder of one of the greatest unsolved art crimes of all time: The 1934 theft of the Just Judges panel, painted by the Flemish Primitive Jan Van Eyck, whose works grace the world’s greatest museums.

Restorers didn’t want to give the copy the same makeover as other panels that have been cleaned up so far.

“We chose to leave that patina on, precisely to show clearly to the people that this is a copy, not the real Van Eyck,” Canon Ludo Collin of Ghent’s Saint Bavo’s Cathedral said before the opening of a new visitor center this weekend.

The real Just Judges could be anywhere, and Ghent still has a prosecutor and two police investigat­ors tasked with solving the crime almost a century later.

And over the years they have had the assistance — usually unsolicite­d — of amateur sleuths ranging from a former police commission­er to a cab driver, a computer expert and a children’s book author.

Like the painting itself with its intricate detail, glowing light and religious subtleties, the crime story is hard to resist.

Magistrate Caroline Dewitte says just before the chief suspect, Arsene Goedertier, died of a stroke half a year after the theft, he murmured: “Only I know where the panel is.” And then there’s the mysterious claim in the last of 14 extortion letters, one never sent, in which Goedertier wrote that “The Just Judges are in a place where neither I nor anyone else can take it without attracting the public’s attention.”

Adding to the mystery, police searching Goedertier’s office found a series of so-far indecipher­able drawings and strange acronyms that could be linked to the theft. “It has shades of The Da Vinci Code,” Dewitte said.

In its long history, the Ghent Altarpiece was nearly destroyed by iconoclast­s in the 16th century, taken to Paris by horse and carriage after the French revolution, sold off to an art dealer, almost burned in the cathedral in 1822 and bricked in during World War I to avoid German appropriat­ion.

After the Just Judges survived all that, then came what was quickly dubbed “the intrepid theft.”

The disappeara­nce was discovered on the morning of April 11, 1934, and soon afterward throngs flooded into the Gothic cathedral, potentiall­y destroying key evidence that could have helped investigat­ors.

“Just think what might have been lost in those first precious hours,” Dewitte said.

Then the first letter arrived at the Ghent bishopric, demanding 1 million francs, a vast sum at the time, for the panel’s safe return, and threatenin­g to destroy the work if authoritie­s didn’t cooperate.

The extortioni­st even gave back a minor rear panel that had also disappeare­d that night, to prove his credential­s. Twelve more such letters followed and the 14th was found, unposted.

“It’s a case that makes people fantasize,” said Paul Drossens, the state archivist who now has the original police dossier in his care. In three big files, marked in red with “Never destroy,” it contains everything from the letters, the appeal to Scotland Yard for help and the 1935 public warning that “the prosecutor’s office is convinced that (the) panel was not destroyed and needs to be tracked down in the country, and primarily in Ghent and its environs.” It never was.

Ever since the massive restoratio­n effort of the 15-by-11foot altarpiece started in 2012 — stripping layers of old varnish and overpainti­ng to reveal Van Eyck’s brushwork — Dewitte said, “I was somehow hoping that it would lead to a breakthrou­gh, because it is so sad that the original panel could not be part of it. It was not to be.”

Canon Collin still holds out some hope for what he lovingly calls “the Loch Ness Monster of our cathedral,” as it’s been suggested the panel might have been hidden somewhere inside the massive Gothic building.

In any case, authoritie­s now want to ensure that all the remaining panels are perfectly protected from theft and humidity. If there is any drawback to the new visitor center, it’s the massive glass encasement that keeps the public just too far away for a close inspection of one of Europe’s greatest works of art.

“It is well protected against theft. But I won’t say how it works,” said Collin. “One panel is enough.”

 ??  ?? Canon Ludo Collin (right) describes the mechanism of the panels on the Ghent Altarpiece by Flemish painter Jan Van Eyck at Saint Bavo Cathedral in Ghent, Belgium. The cathedral will open a new visitor center where the restored Ghent Altarpiece will be the focal point. The 1934 theft of one of the panels, the Just Judges, and the restoratio­n of the work, are testament to perhaps one of the greatest unsolved art crimes of all time.
(AP/Virginia Mayo)
Canon Ludo Collin (right) describes the mechanism of the panels on the Ghent Altarpiece by Flemish painter Jan Van Eyck at Saint Bavo Cathedral in Ghent, Belgium. The cathedral will open a new visitor center where the restored Ghent Altarpiece will be the focal point. The 1934 theft of one of the panels, the Just Judges, and the restoratio­n of the work, are testament to perhaps one of the greatest unsolved art crimes of all time. (AP/Virginia Mayo)
 ??  ?? Visitors watch the restoratio­n of the panels in October 2012 of the Ghent Altarpiece at the Fine Arts museum in Ghent. The painting, considered to be one of Belgium’s masterpiec­es and one of the world’s treasures, was completed in 1432.
(File Photo/AP/Yves Logghe)
Visitors watch the restoratio­n of the panels in October 2012 of the Ghent Altarpiece at the Fine Arts museum in Ghent. The painting, considered to be one of Belgium’s masterpiec­es and one of the world’s treasures, was completed in 1432. (File Photo/AP/Yves Logghe)
 ??  ?? Archivist Paul Drossens opens a police file to reveal one of the first extortion letters received regarding the theft of the Just Judges at the state archive in Ghent.
Archivist Paul Drossens opens a police file to reveal one of the first extortion letters received regarding the theft of the Just Judges at the state archive in Ghent.
 ??  ?? A drawing and theory is retained as evidence in an archived police file containing documentat­ion of the theft.
A drawing and theory is retained as evidence in an archived police file containing documentat­ion of the theft.
 ??  ?? Belgian magistrate Caroline Dewitte stands in front of a poster copy of the Just Judges inside her office in Ghent.
Belgian magistrate Caroline Dewitte stands in front of a poster copy of the Just Judges inside her office in Ghent.
 ??  ?? A mechanism closes a panel on the Ghent Altarpiece.
A mechanism closes a panel on the Ghent Altarpiece.

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