8 Expensive Art Works Found Accidentally
- Published June 30, 2007 - 41 Comments
This is a list of 8 great works of art (well – maybe one is only nominally so) that were found in unusual places. It makes you wonder how many great works of art are lost to the world simply because no one is looking in the right place!
1. In a farmer’s field
In 1820, a Greek peasant named Yorgos was digging in his field on the island of Milos when he unearthed several carved blocks of stone. He burrowed deeper and found four statues – three figures of Hermes and one of Aphrodite, the goddess of love. Three weeks later, the Choiseul archeological expedition arrived by ship, purchased the Aphrodite, and took it to France. Louis XVIII gave it the name Venus de Milo and presented it to the Louvre where it became one of the most famous works of art in history.
2. Beneath a street
On February 21, 1978, electrical workers were putting down lines on a busy street corner in Mexico city when they discovered a 20 ton stone bas-relief of the Aztec night goddess, Coyolxauqui. It is believed to have been sculpted in the early fifteenth century and buried prior to the destruction o the Aztec civilisation by the Spanish conquistadors in 1521. The stone was moved 200 yards from the site to the Museum of the Great Temple.
3. In a hole in the ground
In 1978 more than 500 movies dating from 1903 to 1929 were dug out of a hole in the ground of Dawson City, Yukon. Under normal circumstances, the 35mm nitrate films would have perished, but the permafrost preserved them perfectly.
4. Under a bed

Joanne Perez, the widow of vaudeville performer Pepito the Spanish Clown, cleaned out the area underneath her bed and discovered the only existing copy of the pilot for the TV series I Love Lucy. Pepito had coached Lucille Ball and had guest-starred in the pilot. Ball and her husband, Desi Arnaz, had given it to Pepito as a gift in 1951 and it had remained under the bed for thirty years.
5. On a wall
A middle-aged couple in a suburb of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, asked an art prospector to appraise a painting in their home. While he was there, he examined another painting that the couple had thought was a reproduction of a work by Van Gogh. It turned out to be an 1886 original. On March 10, 1991, the painting Still Life with Flowers sold at auction for $1.4m (US).
6. In a trunk in an attic
In 1961 Barbara Testa, a Hollywood librarian, inherited six steamer trunks that had belonged to her grandfather, James Fraser Gluck, a Buffalo, New York, lawyer who died in 1895. Over the next three decades she gradually sifted through the contents of the trunks, until one day in Autumn of 1990 she came upon 665 pages that turned out to be the original handwritten manuscript of the first half of Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn. The two halves of the great American novel were finally reunited at the Buffalo and Eerie County Public Library.
7. At a flea market
A Philadelphia financial analyst was browsing at a flea market in Adamstown, Pennsylvania, when he was attracted by a wooden picture frame. He paid $4 for it. Back at his home he removed the old torn painting in the frame and found a folded document between the canvas and the wood backing. It turned out to be a 1776 copy of the Declaration of Independence – one of 24 known to remain. On June 13, 1991, it was sold at auction for $2.4m (US)
8. Masquerading as a bicycle rack
For years, employees of the God’s House Tower Archaeology Museum in Southampton, England, propped their bikes against a 27 inch black rock in the basement. In 2000, two Egyptologists investigating the Museums holdings identified the bike rack as a 7th century BC Egyptian statue portraying King Taharqa a Kushite monarch from the region that is modern Sudan. Karen Wordley, the Southampton city council’s curator of archaeological collections, said it was a “mystery” how the sculpture ended up in the Museum basement.
Technorati Tags: art, aztec, lists, van gogh, venus de milo





















August 5th, 2007 at 4:32 am
amazing. i cant believe the declaration of independence one… what luck! and can you imagine going through your attic only to find something hand-written by mr.twain himself? wow.
August 5th, 2007 at 7:24 am
emily: I certainly wouldn’t be upset if I found something like these things in my basement or attic. I would retire shortly afterwards on the sale
August 7th, 2007 at 3:32 pm
All I ever find is the “Hey! I thought we threw this away!” stuff.
Fascinating where things turn up, though.
September 19th, 2007 at 9:12 pm
WOW i love this website, @emily, the declaration of independence one was the one tat surprised me also, how can something like that end up in the flea market WWWWWHHHHOOOOOOOOT
September 19th, 2007 at 11:56 pm
re:er: It is great that these things were found, but just imagine how many things we don’t know about! Frightening thought.
October 27th, 2007 at 11:39 am
Nice list…you know, that a famous Henri Roussea painting was found rolled up in a plumber’s shop…I just can’t remember what painting it was….
October 27th, 2007 at 1:11 pm
Samantha Ivy – I had no idea – I would love to get some more information on that
November 10th, 2007 at 6:47 pm
Thats pretty cool…espiacially the “I love Lucy” one.
November 12th, 2007 at 6:04 am
#5 sounds like something I might do.
November 13th, 2007 at 11:08 am
Also the Kensington Runestone, unearthed in America when a farmer uprooted trees. Hoax ? Perhaps.
I also think it was a kid who tripped over the famous Nefertiti bust, buried in the sand.
December 18th, 2007 at 9:10 am
righteous dude…
January 1st, 2008 at 12:04 am
We have a 10″x14″ photograph of “Pepito” the clown from R.K.O.”Pepito” is the clown that was in the first “I Love Lucy” show. The photograph is inscribed (in spanish),signed and dated 4-14-36.The photographs condition is poor,has some ripping along the edges,with no tape on it.The signature is very good. Anyone have any idea of it,s worth? Thanks for your help.
January 6th, 2008 at 10:57 pm
I have 1 of the 24 copies of the declaration of indepenece. Ive seen ONE on EbAy for $10,000. Anyone know the REAL value of it??
January 6th, 2008 at 11:34 pm
I have one of the 24 copies of the declaration of indepenences too. But, someone painted a picture of pepito the clown on the front of it. Does this affect the value?
January 16th, 2008 at 12:40 am
cool list!!some of them gave me goosebumps,esp the mark twain one,and the declaration of ind.i wanted to ask,jfrater,do all the proceeds from the auctions go to the people who were in posession of the items at the time?for instance the Van Gogh painting,wdnt someone out there claim to be a long lost relative or something,thus demanding some if not all of the money? just wondering
January 30th, 2008 at 10:27 am
I wish I could find something valuable. Woe is me!
January 30th, 2008 at 10:31 am
cryndigo: ah – but you have: The List Universe!
February 9th, 2008 at 11:29 pm
Astounding. I think I’m impressed the most by the Venus de Milo discovery.
February 9th, 2008 at 11:30 pm
February 10th, 2008 at 2:20 pm
I also wish that I was as lucky as some of those other people in finding those things (exept of course that I found the list universe lol
)
April 5th, 2008 at 4:42 pm
Wow only 20? This is one of teh best lists EVA.
April 7th, 2008 at 9:34 pm
nice list… pretty nice one
June 10th, 2008 at 2:24 pm
Awesome list!
Another good one is the Dutch print of The Passion of Joan of Arc they found in a Janitor’s closet in Norway. It was found well after the original print had been destroyed in a fire with no other copies thought to be in existence.
June 12th, 2008 at 6:32 am
imagine that the declaration of independence 2.4MM!!! in a flea market…$4 omg
June 15th, 2008 at 12:23 am
nice list. r u guys in perth?
August 16th, 2008 at 10:41 pm
wow, i cant believe that people find things in places, i am astonished, and quite aroused, please falate me
August 16th, 2008 at 10:43 pm
sorry, I meant, purleese Fellate me
September 22nd, 2008 at 12:59 pm
This is awesome. I’d like to have found the painting myself. I’d sold that mo-fo and lived some. Or I could hang it in my above-a-pizza-shop apartment. You know, create some ambiance.
October 24th, 2008 at 1:06 am
my grandma and my dad have some odd stuff.
currently in our house we have:
Stanford yearbooks from the 1930s (my grandpa tutored mr packard in math)and other old textbooks from that period
some gigantic german books from the 1890s (some really old songbooks are ontop of that)
a collection of old coins sitting in the bathroom as a descoration
some hand weaved baskets by some pit river indians.
a piano from buffalo thats at least a hundred years old sitting in storage
a church organ at least 50 years ago in our garage
a huge collection of baseball cards. im pretty sure i saw a barry bonds card. who knows what other gems lie in there?
a really old armoire from at least 50 or so years we turned into a entertainment center.
some golf clubs from when my grandpa played golf at stanford
thats all i can think of off the top of my head. we really need someone to come out and see what these things are and if they are worth anything or anything important.
when we moved out of our old house we threw a lot of things away…
October 25th, 2008 at 10:58 am
I baught a canvas print of Ron DiCianni OUT OF THE TOMB I had someone look at it and they swear its an original not a print do you think its possible the original was shipped out as a print?
November 1st, 2008 at 4:58 pm
2: Lol boobs.
November 16th, 2008 at 12:47 am
soberhungry: it’s all garbage
November 22nd, 2008 at 10:41 am
Regarding #4 above, the rediscovered I Love Lucy pilot, I have created a website memorial to Pepito Perez, stage name Pepito the Spanish Clown, birth name Jose Escobar Perez; and his wife and stage partner Joanne Perez, stage name Joan Falcy or The Human Rubber Doll, birth name Margaret Zettler.
Pepito & Joanne Website
http://www.cartychronicles.com/Pepito_and_Joanne/Blog/Blog.html
December 17th, 2008 at 5:50 pm
My mum found an original LOVE painting (60’s pop art) in a charity shop, she decided it was probably a worthless copy and instead purchased a large 18th century french painting which looked very genuine. Turned out it was a very good copy somebody had made and the LOVE was the original – it sold at Christie’s for 5 grand and her beloved french painting was 150 quid. She beats herself up to this day and now buys all crap from that charity shop
December 24th, 2008 at 7:28 am
The Spoonmaker’s Diamond (Turkish: Kaşıkçı Elması) is the pride of the Topkapi Palace Museum and its most valuable single exhibit, it is an 86 carat (17 g) pear-shaped diamond.
Various stories are told about the Spoonmarker’s Diamond. According to one tale, a poor fisherman in Istanbul near Yenikapi was wandering idly, empty-handed along the shore when he found a shiny stone among the litter, which he turned over and over not knowing what it was… And then, he sold it to a jeweler for exchange of three spoons.
source: wiki
February 2nd, 2009 at 8:52 pm
awesome list. you are forgetting the terra cotta army that was found by a peasant digging a well. the commies took everything and didnt give the guy anything.
February 24th, 2009 at 7:04 pm
hey that jfrater guy is on the list of best comments! thats funny. and these art things are bizarre. if i found a Van Gogh in my house i would be ecstatic!
February 26th, 2009 at 1:53 am
Lucky bastards haha
March 22nd, 2009 at 3:53 am
amazing list
April 1st, 2009 at 2:23 am
Yet another list that’s sucked time from my meagre existance!
I read the list which had the disappearnce of the Irish Crown Jewels and can’t help but wonder when they’ll turn up in someone’s attic!
May 30th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
Anyone else heard of Teri Horton and the $5 Pollack? She found a gag gift at the thrift store, paid $5 and someone suggested that it looks similar to Jackson Pollack’s paintings. I guess it’s not on here because there’s still some controversies around its authenticity (only two people are certain it is a Pollock – one of which has a reputation for selling counterfeit art, the other says they found a Pollack’s thumbprint…even though there are none on file and the partial from the paintcan could belong to anyone. Why would there be a fingerprint when he painted on the floor anyway?). Anyone know anything new about it? I tried to see if it was actually sold, but haven’t found anything new about it.