(Q113531898)

English

The Greatest Fake-Art Scam in History?

news article

Statements

0 references
The Greatest Fake-Art Scam in History? (English)
0 references
1 reference
For decades, this self-taught painter, who had once scratched out a living in Amsterdam, Morocco, and other spots along the hippie trail, had passed off his own paintings as newly discovered masterpieces by Max Ernst, André Derain, Max Pechstein, Georges Braque, and other Expressionists and Surrealists from the early 20th century. Helene Beltracchi, along with two accomplices—including her sister—had sold the paintings for six and seven figures through auction houses in Germany and France, including Sotheby’s and Christie’s. One phony Max Ernst had hung for months in a retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Steve Martin purchased a fake Heinrich Campendonk through the Paris gallery Cazeau-Béraudière for $860,000 in 2004; the French magazine-publishing mogul Daniel Filipacchi paid $7 million for a phony Max Ernst, titled The Forest (2), in 2006. For the 14 fakes that the Beltracchis were eventually charged with selling, their estimated take was around €16 million, or $22 million. Their total haul over the years must have been far more. (English)
16 August 2022
0 references
JOSHUA HAMMER
0 references
10 October 2012
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
 
edit
    edit
      edit
        edit
          edit
            edit
              edit
                edit
                  edit