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ART EXPERTS IN THE EYE OF A CYCLONE By Adrian Darmon
12 April 2012
Catégorie : Focus
Cet article se compose de 7 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Secondly, many leading experts who had kept a tight control over the art market passed away after the year 2000, notably Daniel Wildenstein, John Rewald, Jean-Alain Méric, the specialist of Toulouse-Lautrec, André Paciti, François Daulte or Michel Kellermann among others. While the Wildenstein Institute continued its activities under the supervision of Guy Wildenstein, the only surviving son of Daniel, the experts who had died were replaced by other specialists while new conditions were imposed on owners of works who were trying to have them authenticated.

All of a sudden and mainly because of the multiplication of authentication requests, they were asked fees, sometime amounting to over 1500 USD to submit a work, whether it was genuine or not. No need to say that such demand was rather dissuasive in the eyes of many of those concerned.

Thirdly, the world of experts became the theatre of unprecedented battles which sometime led to court actions. This was the case between the specialists of Amedeo Modigliani  Marc Resttellini and Christian Parisot, both being engaged in a ferocious quarrel, each claiming to be the real expert for that painter.

At first Restellini worked with Parisot before challenging his authority when he claimed that the latter had mainly based his researches on the archives of Joseph Lenthemann which contained several fakes

In 1997, Restellini benefited from the support of Daniel Wildenstein who hired him in order to publish new Catalogues Raisonnés of Modigliani's drawings and paintings but the young art historian soon faced problems with some despondent collectors whose works he had refused to authenticate, notably "Jeune Femme Brune" which was to be offered for sale at Phillips. The same year, he refused to include in his catalogue " Beatrice Hastings seated" included in a sale at Christie's because the painting had been compromised by extensive over-painting which in his eyes was equivalent to a fake (the work was anyway auctioned for 2,6 million USD)

In 2000, apparently fed up with the difficulties he met, Restellini gave up his job at the Wildenstein Institute and became artistic director of the Musée du Luxembourg though he had not taken the French official examination for museum curators. Two years later his reputation was somewhat damaged when he curated "Modigliani: the Melancholy Angel", a retrospective exhibition for which he was much criticised because 30 works (out of 120 ) were being shown without detailed provenance or any argument for their authenticity as they were not listed in the Ceroni Catalogue Raisonné. After that, in 2007 Restellini decided to close his Modigliani chapter preferring instead to set up the new Pinacothèque of Paris.

As a result of his longstanding battle against Restellini, Christian Parisot fell into disgrace in 2008 when he received a two-year prison sentence for having exhibited 77 drawings falsely attributed to Jeanne Hébuterne, the last partner of Modigliani who had committed suicide two days after his death in 1920. Following his trial, Parisot was again charged in Paris under the suspicion of having forged a Modigliani drawing which he had authenticated and sold for about 100 000 USD.

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