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Have Heists Become Chic?

November 10, 2025November 10, 2025 Natalia Olivas

With so many issues and wars around the world, watching a modern day heist go down has a refreshing spirit to it. Recently, the Louvre in Paris was robbed in broad daylight. About $102 million dollars worth of French crown jewels were stolen by 4 suspects dressed as construction workers.

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7 Minutes Is All It Takes

November 5, 2025November 2, 2025 Penny Robertson

Have you ever wondered just how much you can accomplish in 7 minutes? Well it might just be more than you could ever imagine, like a crime that could either leave you endlessly wealthy or with a like sentence. On October 19, 2025 at approximately 9:30am in Paris, France, 7

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Art You Can See, Art You Can Steal: The Louvre Heist

November 2, 2025October 29, 2025 Lindsey Belsky

The Apollo Gallery is designed to impress with its gold ceiling, open concept, and jewel cases that seem to float. Thieves used a lift to reach a window where they were dressed as construction workers and stole eight crown jewels. October 19, 2025. Based on many news reports, they estimate

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Art is Not Gold, Stolen Pieces are Hard to Sell

May 24, 2023May 10, 2023 Anna Chen

Most artistic works, like paintings, are hard to steal and sell. First, most of them bear the artists’ names engraved in the art. Secondly, most famous art and paintings are always priceless and cannot fetch actual prices for the thieves who prefer selling them on the black market since most

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Anti-Capitalist Louvre Art

April 26, 2013February 14, 2021 bgoeltzenleuchter

On April 24, french artist and member of the Arte Povera movement, Michelangelo Pistoletto, debuted a very interesting piece of art. For the first time in its history, the Louvre allowed an artist to paint on the beautiful glass pyramid that lies outside of the museum, itself. This piece of

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The Art | Crime Archive (ACA) is a collaborative laboratory, teaching center, and web-based platform devoted to the study of the shadow space where art and crime overlap. The ACA’s online platform was created in 2012 and since its inception has functioned as a participatory archive for a wide range of scholars, artists, students, and community members. The ACA welcomes submissions of media and accompanying short essays on art, crime, and culture. The ACA peer-reviews submissions and only accepts materials that significantly contribute to the broader academic and artistic discourses on creativity and actual criminal behavior. As a general rule, it does not publish submissions related to crime fiction or figurative works.

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