Massive sculptures worth $2.1 million stolen from SoCal warehouse in mysterious heist
They vanished in a weekend.
Police believe that on June 14 or 15 at least one thief made off with both "Icarus Within" and "Quantum Mechanics: Homme," - sculptures valued at a combined $2.1 million - from a warehouse in Anaheim Hills. Other artwork and valuables inside the warehouse that would have been easier to move were untouched. Authorities have scant details about the heist.
"Unfortunately, we have little information but we are investigating," Anaheim Police Sgt. Matt Sutter said.
The life-sized "Quantum Mechanics: Homme" artwork, composed of lucite, bronze and stainless steel, depicts a winged and horned man and was featured in the award-winning short film "Creation" in 2022. It's valued at $1.8 million.
A second Winn piece, "Icarus Within," based partially on the sculptor's chaotic childhood escape from Vietnam, is a steel and bronze sculpture that also stands 8 feet tall, weighs a ton, and is valued at $350,000.
Both sculptures were being stored in a temporary facility and were last seen by warehouse workers in Anaheim Hills on Saturday, according to the Anaheim Police Department.
When the workers returned to the facility Monday, both pieces were missing, according to police.
Winn believes the pieces may have been stolen by an unscrupulous collector while an art recovery expert suspects the two sculptures will be destroyed for scrap metal.
"Typically these sculptures, when we do exhibitions, take about a dozen men and two forklifts to move it and a flatbed or a truck to carry it," Winn said. "This is not an easy task."
Winn told The Times that the last few days have been stressful and that his anxiety has been "through the roof." Winn is considered a blue-chip artist, meaning his work is highly sought after and has a high monetary value.
The former UC Irvine medical student, who was once homeless after switching his major from medicine to art, said he blends fine art, quantum metaphysics and philosophy into his work.
The Vietnamese refugee owns the Winn Slavin Fine Art gallery on Rodeo Drive and was appointed earlier this month as Art Commissioner for John Wayne Airport.
The loss of his art has pushed Winn "to a dark place," he said, though he's found some catharsis in talking about the situation.
"These are my children," he said of each of his individual works. "I have no physical, organic children. Every artwork I create is my child."
The larger of two sculptures, "Homme," was the seventh and only unsold work in Winn's Quantum Mechanics series, which explores philosophical concepts, universal truths and tries to answer the enduring question: why are we here?
The smaller "Icarus Within" focused on Winn's struggle around the age of 9 in emigrating to the United States in the final days of the Vietnam War. The sculpture was tied to Winn's movie "Chrysalis," based on his memoirs, that is supposed to premiere this fall.
Winn said the level of sophistication in the theft led him to suspect he was targeted and that his pieces may be on the black market.
He turned over a list of individuals who have recently inquired about his sculptures to police, he said.
Sutter, the Anaheim Police sergeant, said this is the largest burglary he's seen in his 25 years with the department.
"We've had our share of high-end homes that were burglarized, but this type of crime, involving forklifts, trucks, crews and the sheer size of the sculptures is something I can't remember us having before," Sutter said.
Sutter said investigators are asking businesses near the warehouse for any footage that could help them identify a suspect.
"I have no idea where these sculptures are," Sutter said. "They could be in somebody's house or in a shipping container somewhere. That's what we're trying to find out."
Chris Marinello, founder of the dispute resolution and art recovery service named Art Recovery International, said the sculptures will likely be scrapped for their metals.
Marinello said scrap yards tear apart such works into thousands of small pieces to cloak the metal's origin.
"Unfortunately, the criminals are not that bright and they don't see artwork but, instead, a sculpture worth millions that is more valuable to them for the raw metals like steel and bronze," Marinello said.
Marinello pointed to a two-ton Henry Moore bronze sculpture, known as the Reclining Figure, stolen from the artist's foundation in Hertfordshire, England in 2005.
The piece was valued at 3 million pounds, but authorities believe it was scrapped for just 1,500 pounds.
"You can't sell sculptures of this magnitude on the market," Marinello said of the Winn's stolen pieces.
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Democrats Clash on Senate Floor Over Policing Bills and How to Take On Trump
A dry policy debate over bipartisan policing legislation exploded on Tuesday afternoon into a heated and personal clash among three Democratic senators, offering a rare glimpse of the internal fight in their party over how to take on President Trump. The spectacle started in the least dramatic way possible: Senator Catherine Cortez Masto, Democrat of Nevada and a former attorney general and federal prosecutor, asked for unanimous consent to pass a package of policing bills, including one to reauthorize support for mental health services for law enforcement officers, and another to make recruits eligible for funding for training programs. It quickly went off the rails when Senator Cory Booker, the progressive New Jersey Democrat, rose to object, accusing Ms. Cortez Masto of being 'complicit' with an authoritarian president. Things got personal and nasty after Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, a longtime rival to Mr. Booker who also ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination and a cosponsor of some of the measures, noted that he failed to attend a key committee meeting where members debated the legislation and voted unanimously to move it to the Senate floor. 'Don't question my integrity,' Mr. Booker shouted so loudly his voice could be heard outside the Senate chamber. 'Don't question my motives. I'm standing for Jersey, I'm standing for my police officers, I'm standing for the Constitution and I'm standing for what's right. And dear God, if you want to come at me that way, you're going to have to take it up with me. There's too much on the line right now in America.' Because the Justice Department was 'weaponizing' public safety grants against states and cities that 'resist the Trump policy agenda,' Mr. Booker said, Democrats should oppose the bills unless they added language to safeguard any law enforcement grants from politicization. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Manhattan Gunman Appeared to Target N.F.L. in Deadly Shooting
The gunman who opened fire yesterday evening in a Midtown Manhattan office building was carrying a note in his wallet that claimed he had brain trauma from playing football and that accused the N.F.L. of covering up the dangers of the game. New York City's mayor, Eric Adams, said today that the gunman, whom investigators identified as Shane Tamura, was targeting the N.F.L. headquarters when he stormed the building with an AR-15-style rifle. He killed three people — a police officer, a security guard and a financial executive — in the lobby, but he was unable to reach the N.F.L. offices because he entered the wrong elevator, Adams said. Instead, Tamura traveled to the building's 33rd floor, where he killed a fourth person, an associate at the company that owns the office building, before fatally shooting himself in the chest. It was the deadliest mass shooting in New York City in 25 years. The authorities spent today assembling a detailed picture of the gunman's life in recent years and of the cross-country drive that he took from his home in Las Vegas before the shooting. Law enforcement officials there had documented his mental health history. In his note, the gunman asked that his brain be examined for signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., which can only be definitively diagnosed after death. Some people found to have C.T.E., including former N.F.L. players, are known to have experienced symptoms including impulsive behavior, depression and suicidal thoughts. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
Every Vote Counts in Brooklyn. Even Those Cast by Dead People.
In a super-tight Republican primary in Brooklyn, where 16 votes separated winner from loser, Rose J. Chiara's absentee ballot deserves an extra layer of scrutiny. She had last voted 17 years ago, in the 2008 presidential primaries. She was 94 then, and would be 112 today, had it not been for her death in 2013. The recent vote in Ms. Chiara's name in an otherwise obscure City Council primary is one of a number of ballots that appear to be fraudulent, leading to growing calls for a criminal investigation. 'It's a hustle. It's a scheme. It's a subversion of democracy,' Joseph Chiara, 80, Ms. Chiara's son, said after being told of his mother's supposed vote. 'I think it's a horrible crime.' Ms. Chiara is one of at least three dead people who had ballots cast in their names in the contest, according to records and earlier reports. Several other suspicious votes came from people, very much alive, who say they had no idea their ballots had been cast. For whom, no one could say. The number of potentially fraudulent ballots — over two dozen so far — exceeds George Sarantopoulos's margin of victory over Richie Barsamian, chairman of the Kings County Republican Party, in the District 47 race in southern Brooklyn. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.