Taller Together
Art crime is usually sold to the public as a scene: a broken case, a night guard, a motorbike, a painting gone from a wall. Noah Charney's account of the field is less cinematic and more unsettling. The crime is not always the removal. Often it is the prior condition that made removal possible: weak records, diffused authority, untested expertise, a discreet market, and an institution that trusts an alarm before it trains the person who must answer it. In this conversation with Tamzin Lovell, Charney treats art crime as a way of reading cultural power. The useful question is not simply who stole the object. It is who could move it, sell it, ignore it, insure it, authenticate it, or fail to notice its absence.
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