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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

Fakes have become a minefield for the art market to such an extent that experts have had a tendency to reject works simply in raising doubts about their provenance even if they look genuine. The snag is that they have so far held new technologies in contempt in order to examine them and preferred to rely instead on their flair and knowledge. But as we all know, human judgements are not always 100% sure not to say that some experts are unbearably conceited.

It thus seems extraordinary that most experts are reluctant to get tuned to modern times to call upon laboratory techniques when they feel at a loss regarding a piece of art for which their opinion is needed. If that happens, they will prefer to discard it to avoid any possible problem in the future. However such stand will inevitably have some wicked effects on the market with a growing legion of collectors dismayed by their decisions.

The position of an expert is nevertheless by no way easy since he has full authority regarding the works of the artist he has to authenticate. It will thus not be surprising to learn that many specialists in the West have received death threats whereas a handful of their counterparts in Russia have already been put to death after being confronted to Mafia circles.

It is already quite hard to list works for the Catalogue Raisonné of an artist without the fear of making a mistake especially when it comes to examine a newly discovered piece deprived of any solid provenance.

In addition, experts are not made out of the same mould. Usually they should be independent-minded and surely not biased regarding the works they have to examine. Alas, several specialists were- and have been- used  to basing at first their opinion on the personality of the owner of a painting or sculpture wishing for an authentication. No need to say that their decision would often be negative if their visitor looked dubious. If on the contrary, they had to deal with important collectors, they would be inevitably induced to judge a work in a different way.

Some experts thinking highly of themselves have also found it hard to deliver authentication certificates for works that could then reach high prices especially as they would get ridiculous fees in exchange of their opinion. Making someone a millionaire thanks to his certificate can sometime make a specialist jealous. In that instance, many stories have been running about art works which had been rejected as false forcing their disappointed owners to get rid of them for nothing before they reappeared as genuine on the market after experts had changed their mind.

There have also been experts who refused to authenticate works for various reasons like the specialist of Derain, who was notably approached in 2000 by an amateur to authenticate an atypical fauve painting representing a barge on the river Seine off the Eiffel tower, which he eventually threatened to seize on the ground that it had been stolen. The auctioneer who submitted the Derain painting on behalf of its owner told the latter that according to the expert the theft had occurred around 1939-1940, a fact sufficient for him to refuse his endorsement though the legal 30-year limitation for a theft had passed, meaning the painting could not be seized unless it had been stolen by the Nazis but the specialist, who indicated that this work was listed in his archives, refused to bulge in adding that as long as he lived he would never deliver an authentication certificate for it.

Three years after the expert's death, the owner of that painting, which was finally not listed as a Nazi spoliation by the Art Loss Register, decided to submit it to the newly created Derain Committee but was surprisingly informed that it was fake, a strange opinion since a forger would have painted a scene of London, Chatou or Collioure instead of choosing to represent Paris. In that matter, either the expert had left a note ordering the rejection of that painting in case it would be again submitted for authentication or the auctioneer made up this odd story for some obscure reason.

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