Word: roux
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...recovery also confirmed the motive for the recent rash of French art thefts, which was the major reason Riviera Resident Somerset Maugham sold his collection (see col. 1). In the Colombe d'Or case, Francis Roux had privately paid out a reported $20,000 to get his paintings back. In the Cézanne affair, insurance companies paid out a reported...
From his earliest days as the patron in the 1920s, Roux had found himself fascinated by the customers he got. They were an impassioned, talkative lot who came all the way from Paris to paint in the warm sunshine of Saint-Paul-de-Vence. Soutine took a room at the Golden Dove, and so did Braque, Bonnard, Léger and Utrillo. There was no end to the procession of great names who ate there. The artists seemed to like Roux, for they showered him with paintings, either as gifts or for a modest prix...
...Been Robbed!" Like his father, Francis Roux did not believe in insurance, though sometimes as a precaution he would take some of his most treasured paintings up to bed with him at night. But one night a few weeks ago, he did not even bother to do that. Sure enough, when he came down next morning, the walls of his dining room were bare. "We've been robbed!" he screamed, as his wife and mother burst into tears. Gone were three Braques, three Légers, a Picasso, Modigliani, Buffet, Dufy, Miró, Matisse, Bonnard, Utrillo, Valadon, Laurencin, Derain...
...police seemed to be more confused than ever. Gaby Rouze told of having had dealings with "two women" who tried to buy the paintings with counterfeit bills. Later the police were sent off on a wild-goose chase to a supposed cache in a deserted grange in Antibes. Francis Roux has received three ransom notes demanding $8,000, $12,000 and finally, $16,000. Last week the police arrested a sixth suspect, who they think may have had the paintings for a while and then passed them on. But to whom? The suspect merely shrugged...
Though the stolen paintings are valued at close to half a million dollars, Francis Roux still has his consolations: 4,000 other canvases that his father had only briefly hung. And his father's old friends are being more than sympathetic. Upon reading of the robbery, Bernard Buffet promptly sent Roux a painting of a ram's head to replace the Golden Dove's stolen fish...