John Barelli spent thirty-eight years working in the Security Department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1978-82 Assistant Manager of Security; 82-86 Associate Manager of Security (2nd in charge); 86-2001 Head of the Security Department; 01-16 Chief Security Officer). For more than thirty years he was the individual who ran all security operations and formed and developed the department as a leader in museum security throughout the world (his purview also included The Met Cloisters and The Met Breuer Museum). He holds an MA in Criminal Justice and a PhD in Criminology. He lives with his wife, Anna, in New York City. They met at the Met.
Description
“The theft and sometime recovery of a work of art holds a fascination for many that John Barelli fully satisfies in these absorbing pages born of a long career studying the subject and putting it into practice at the Metropolitan Museum of Art”.
Philippe de Montebello Director Emeritus, the Metropolitan Museum of Art
"Forget Oceans 8, Put The Thomas Crowne Affair on hold, tell the Pink Panther hes got to wait. If you want a guided tour through the shadows and into the real world of art theft, Stealing the Show is your ticket." – John Miller, Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence NYPD and former CBS News Senior Correspondent
"I recommend placing this book on a shelf next to Robert Edsel’s Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation’s Treasures from the Nazis. Barelli’s Stealing the Show is, in its own way, as much a celebration of American ingenuity and courage in the service of art and culture as is Edsel’s volume…This book is about much more than the untold stories of half a dozen major art thefts. It is about what it means to be a New Yorker, what it means to be a lover of art and the rule of law, and what it means to be a highly-trained professional with an especially stressful job.”
–Ron Smith, Poet Laureate of Virginia, 2014-2016
John Barelli made us feel totally secure at the Met for more than a quarter of a century—and now he tells us exactly how he handled threats, thefts, and the challenges of keeping art and visitors safe in the post-9/11 world. Like the great treasures he protected, this is a masterpiece of a memoir.
Harold Holzer
Author, winner of the National Humanities Medal, and former senior Vice President for External Affairs at the Met Museum