AG百家乐在线官网

French painting worth 拢250k found in bin after owner left it behind at German airport

Police, with the help of the owner's nephew, traced the artwork to a recycling dumpster used by the airport's cleaning company.

German police managed to save a surreal painting from destruction after finding the missing artwork at the bottom of a recycling bin at D眉sseldorf Airport, the international airport of D眉sseldorf (capital of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia).
Image: This pricey surreal painting was saved from a recycling bin. Pic: Dusseldorf police
Why you can trust Sky News

A painting worth more than 鈧�280k (拢250k) which was accidentally left at a German airport has been reunited with its owner after being found at the bottom of a nearby recycling bin.

The businessman, who chose not to be named, forgot to take the painting by French surrealist Yves Tanguy when he left the check-in counter to board a flight from Dusseldorf to Tel Aviv on 27 November.

By the time he landed in Israel and contacted Dusseldorf police, the cardboard-wrapped oeuvre was nowhere to be found.

German police managed to save a surreal painting from destruction after finding the missing artwork at the bottom of a recycling bin at D眉sseldorf Airport, the international airport of D眉sseldorf (capital of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia).
Image: It was found after the owner's nephew returned to hunt for it. Pic: Dusseldorf police

It failed to appear despite multiple emails back and forth between authorities and the businessman, police said.

They said it was finally found after the owner's nephew travelled to the airport from nearby Belgium to talk with police in person.

A Dusseldorf police spokesperson said in a statement that an inspector had the critical thought when he saw an advertisement for the airport's cleaning company on his desk.

"The experienced investigator contacted the cleaning company responsible," the statement read.

More on Germany

"Together with the responsible property manager, they looked carefully in the waste paper containers provided for the area. In fact, the valuable painting was at the bottom."

Another police spokesperson, Andre Hartwig, added: "This was definitely one of our happiest stories this year. It was real detective work."