13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (2024)

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13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (1)

ByLauren Cahn

Updated: Jun. 02, 2024

    Scratch the surface (literally, in the case of at least one Picasso painting) and you'll see the art world is teeming with mystery, scandal, and intrigue.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (2)

    Justin Lane/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

    Did Leonardo da Vinci really paint Salvator Mundi?

    The painting, Salvator Mundi, sold at Christie’s in 2017 for an eye-popping $450 million, in large part because it was attributed to Leonardo da Vinci. But some art experts, including Oxford art historian Matthew Landrus, believe that only 20 percent of the painting was completed by Leonardo himself. Citing artistic details and painting techniques evident in the brushwork, Landrus suspects the rest of the painting was done by Leonardo’s assistant, Bernardino Luini. Bernardino’s work has never fetched more than $654,545.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (3)

    Friedrich Jurgen/Action Press/Friedrich Jurgen/Action Press/Shutterstock

    Are these watercolors really by Adolph Hitler?

    Even though Adolph Hitler was rejected from art school, he did quite a bit of painting in his youth. And there are people in the world who’d pay good money (anywhere from $150 to $51,000) to acquire the artistic efforts of der Führer, art being subjective after all. But last month, German prosecutors confiscated 63 paintings signed “A. Hitler” on suspicion of forgery. The jury is out (figuratively) on their authenticity, and verification is apparently extremely challenging.

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    The scandalous death of Joseph Boehm

    Sir Joseph Boehm was a prolific Victorian-age sculptor credited with, among other things, creating the British Victoria-head coin. In 1890, at the age of 56, Boehm died suddenly of a stroke in his studio, but he wasn’t alone when he died. He was with Queen Victoria’s sixth daughter, Princess Louise, a sculptor herself. Many believe his death occurred in the midst of a sexual encounter with Louise. Historians, including Lucinda Hawksley, author of Queen Victoria’s Mysterious Daughter: A Biography of Princess Louise, believe Louise and Joseph had been engaged in a longtime affair.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (5)

    Marion Curtis/StarPix for CBS Films/Shutterstock

    The shooting death of Vincent Van Gogh

    Dutch post-impressionist painter Vincent Van Gogh died at age 37 as a result of a gunshot wound at close range, and although it’s long been assumed the emotionally unstable artist committed suicide, there’s always been debate as to whether he was actually shot by a 16-year-old schoolboy. The movie At Eternity’s Gate, starring Willem Dafoe as the tortured artist, argues that it was not suicide, but it also wasn’t murder, but rather an unfortunate accident, a view put forth by others, including forensic expert, Dr. Vincent Di Maio. It’s on par with these strangest unsolved mysteries.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (6)

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    What’s the David sculpture holding in his right hand?

    Michelangelo Buonarroti sculpted the magnificent David with a sling in his left hand, leading to the presumption Michelangelo envisioned the biblical figure as a lefty. But some experts believe David’s right hand tells the more important story: it is disproportionately oversized, which some speculate is a nod to David’s having been “strong of hand.” And some point to the bulging veins in the hand and surmise David is gripping something tightly, which may or may not be another weapon.

    Psst! Speaking of strange mysteries, ever heard of the Mandela Effect?

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (7)

    Alfredo Dagli Orti/Shutterstock

    Why did Caravaggio kill?

    The artist, Caravaggio, was known as a troublemaker. For starters, in 1596, he killed another man during a brawl in Rome. No one knows what led to the brawl, although possibilities include money, sports, and romantic jealousy, but what’s even more mysterious is whether Caravaggio spent the rest of his life expressing his guilt through his paintings, some of which art historians believe contain thinly veiled confessions. These include his painting of the murder of St. John the Baptist and his depiction of a despondent Goliath as Caravaggiohimself. He wouldn’t have been the only artist to use his work as a secret message board—here are 10 hidden messages in famous paintings.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (8)

    Enzo Russo/AP/Shutterstock

    Was Caravaggio the victim of lead poisoning?

    But maybe his violent tendencies weren’t Caravaggio’s fault exactly; maybe, just maybe, he was a victim of lead poisoning, which is known to cause changes to the nervous system. This position is supported by scientists who analyzed his bones and determined with 85 percent certainty that Caravaggio had enough lead in his system to make him behave erratically and to ultimately cause his death. If this is true, the lead most likely came from the paints Caravaggio was using, especially since he was notoriously messy with them.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (9)

    Historia/Shutterstock

    Did Rembrandt reveal a murder plot in one of his paintings?

    Rembrandt’s painting, The Night Watch, depicts a civilian militia rousing to action in the middle of the night. But some, including the director and artist, Peter Greenaway, believe the painting is “really an exposé of a murder—of one officer by another.” It’s a theory he supports with 20 points—all visual and based on the painting—in his films, Night Watching and Rembrandt J’Accuse. Unlike this one, all 13 of these “unsolved mysteries” can easily be explained by science.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (10)

    Evan Vucci/AP/Shutterstock

    Who’s the man hidden under Picasso’s The Blue Room?

    In 2014, scientists announced they found, hidden beneath the surface of Pablo Picasso’sThe Blue Room, a portrait of a man wearing a bow tie, his chin resting on his hand. It’s not all that unusual for an artist to reuse a canvas, but what’s mysterious is the identity of the man. Some speculate he might be the art dealer who hosted Picasso’s first show in 1901 (Ambroise Vollard). What’s known for sure isthat it is not a self-portrait.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (11)

    Universal History Archive/UIG/Shutterstock

    Is there another woman hidden beneath the Mona Lisa?

    In 2017, French scientist Pascal Cotte revealed he’d discovered the hidden image of a woman beneath the surface of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. It had taken him more than a decade of examination and analysis and has led to speculation about who the woman might be. Cotte has said it’s another woman from Florence, Pacifica Brandano. But not only is the jury out on that, not all experts even agree there’s actually a different woman depicted. Some believe what Cotte discovered is nothing more than a painter’s “first draft” of the finished product.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (12)

    Josh Reynolds/AP/Shutterstock

    Who pulled off the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist?

    In 1990, 13 works of art worth approximately $500 million were stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston in a robbery perpetrated by two men posing as law enforcement officers. “Despite some promising leads in the past, the… theft…remains unsolved,” the Museum states on its website. In fact, the Museum is offering a $10 million reward for information leading directly to the recovery of the art, plus a separate reward of $100,000 for the return of one specific piece. This isn’t the first time something pricey has gone missing—check out the most expensive things ever stolen.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (13)

    Peter Dejong/AP/Peter Dejong/AP/Shutterstock

    Where is the missing art from the Rotterdam heist?

    In 2012, thieves broke into the Kunsthal Museum in Rotterdam and made off with seven paintings, including works by Picasso, Monet, and Gauguin. Four Romanian men were arrested and convicted of the theft in 2013, but no one knows what happened to the stolen artworks. The mother of one of the thieves confessed to burning the paintings but then retracted her confession. In 2018, someone planted a very realistic looking Picasso-esque painting beneath a rock in a forest in Romania, but it was discovered to be fake. The paintings remain missing.

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    13 Strangest Unsolved Mysteries of the Art World (14)

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    Who is Banksy?

    The artist, Banksy, has been around since the early 1990s, creating striking and highly recognizable street art in public places. Yet their identity remains a mystery. Who is Banksy? “Over the years several different people have attempted to ‘unmask’ Banksy,”writes Artnet, in its 2016 analysis of ten popular theories, to which street artist Carlo McCormick, contributed his own opinions (could he be Banksy?). Ready for more to chew on? Read on for 14 of the most baffling mysteries about the universe.

    Originally Published: March 29, 2019

    Author

    Lauren Cahn

    Lauren has covered knowledge, history, the British royal family, true crime and riddles for Reader's Digest since 2017. She sharpened her research skills as a lawyer in the 1990s, became an early HuffPost blogger in the 2000s, then began reporting local news in the 2010s. She's been writing news, features and celebrity interviews for a variety of p...

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