Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam
The Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam owes its name to the painter of the same name, of whom it holds the largest collection of works in the world.
It consists of only two buildings: the main one, opened in 1973 and designed by the Dutch architect and craftsman Gerrit Rietveld, and the so-called new wing, whose works were completed in 1999 under the careful guidance of Kisho Kurokawa.
In 2002 two great works by the famous artist were stolen from the gallery, a congregation leaving the Reformed Church of Nuenen from 1855 and the beach of Scheveningen before a storm from 1882.
The paintings were found only 14 years later, in September 2016, after a search by the Guardia di Finanza of a group of drug traffickers doing business with the Camorra.
Today the paintings have an inestimable value.

