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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
Without a authentication certificate delivered by an established art expert any work of art would have strictly no value but following a series of disputes regarding how works are judged as genuine or not, several specialists endowed with the monopoly of exerting a godly power during many years have met resistance from many collectors.

During over a century the opinions delivered by art experts were unchallenged mainly because the art market was somewhat regarded as a closed circuit until the early 1980s. From then on, things started to change significantly when record auction prices piled up in London, New York or Paris. As a result, the booming market attracted new investors ready to pay huge sums of money for Impressionist, modern and contemporary works of art.

The stunning development of the art market after 1985 enhanced the role of art experts, especially as many important paintings were then being rediscovered. Still, determined to preserve their omnipotent privileges, these specialists considered they would always have the last word when it came to deliver an opinion.

It was thus fully admitted that for instance the Wildenstein Institute had full authority on many painters like Fragonard, Manet, Gauguin, Monet, Vlaminck, Marquet, Van Dongen and others, that the heirs of Pablo Picasso were the sole experts of that artist, that André Paciti and Dominique Fabiani were the guardians of Guillaumin's works, François Daulte, the expert for Renoir and Sisley, Michel Kellermann, the specialist of Derain or that John Rewald was fully in charge of the works of Seurat and Cézanne while Brame & Lorenceau had full control over the works of De Dreux, Degas and lately Toulouse-Lautrec.

In fact, each important artist have had one single expert to oversee his oeuvre, either a well-established specialist,  a member of his family exerting his moral rights or a committee set up to authenticate his works.

When the art market started to reach an unprecedented momentum at the end of the 1980s, the leading experts then had suddenly much work to do with scores of rediscovered works which were brought to them for examination. At that time, they willingly received people who contacted them without asking fees for a submission.

It was therefore not too difficult to ask for an appointment with the famous Daniel Wildenstein to show him for instance a so far unknown work by Gauguin, Manet or Monet. But in hoping for an authentication certificate his visitors would somewhat be put under the obligation to sell him what they were submitting meaning that if they refused to compel to his wish, they faced the risk not to a obtain such certificate.

Still, amateurs and small dealers were usually happy to reach a selling agreement with Daniel Wildenstein whose position was rather undisputed. In fact, the other main experts had also a kind of power of life or death over what they were being submitted.

Such situation went on to change at the start of the 21st Century when the market became much more active in the fields of Impressionist, Modern and Contemporary arts. Firstly, the aging Daniel Wildenstein had been much affected by the revelations made in a book published in 1995 by art historian Hector Feliciano suggesting that Georges, his father, had saved much of his huge collection in collaborating from New York with the Nazis during World War Two. Daniel Wildenstein tried in vain to sue Feliciano who had disclosed that his father's collection had largely been preserved during the occupation of France while his Paris gallery continued its activities with the help of his director Roger Dequoy, a fact made possible  following a secret meeting held in 1940 in Aix-en-Provence with Karl Haberstok, a nazi art dealer and private advisor of Adolf Hitler.

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