Norwegian police today announced the recovery of a valuable lithograph by Edvard Munch which was stolen in 2009, with two men arrested.
The artwork, named 'Historien' or 'History' in Norwegian, was retrieved undamaged, a statement said.
It shows an elderly bearded man speaking to a young boy and was valued at the time of its theft at USD 2,44,000, but art experts said it was too well-known to be put on the market.
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The lithograph was stolen after one of the windows of Nyborg Kunst, a leading Oslo gallery, was smashed with a rock.
"My client denies the charge," Oystein Storrvik, the lawyer of one of the arrested men, told Norway's NTB news agency.
The works of Munch (1863-1944) have long been targeted by thieves.
In 2004, two of his masterpieces -- "The Scream" and "Madonna", with a combined value of USD 100 million -- were stolen in a brazen afternoon raid on Oslo's Munch museum.
Ten years before that, another version of "The Scream" was stolen from Oslo's national art gallery.
All the works were later recovered.