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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

Numerous strange decisions have also been delivered by experts all over these years. In 1998, the successor of John Rewald, was asked by an important art dealer to give his opinion regarding a preparatory drawing of "La Grande Jatte" by Seurat stuck to a cardboard with the 1909 and 1921 labels of the retrospectives held by Bernheim Jeune in Paris glued on its back. Both labels were apparently good signs about the provenance of such drawing but while considering the labels as genuine, Rewald's successor stipulated that the drawing, of which he was only shown a photo, was a fake though it seemed ludicrous to have these labels taken off from the back of the original work to stick them on a forgery.

Recently, a small antique dealer appeared on TV in France to recall how in the mid 1990s he bought at auction in Paris for almost nothing a painting representing hay stacks which he was sure was by Claude Monet but after entrusting a friend to have the canvas examined by Daniel Wildenstein he learned that the expert had authenticated this work as by Blanche Hoschedé-Monet, the artist's daughter-in-law.

Rather disappointed by the expert's decision, the owner of that painting sold it for about 6000 USD to a German collector who, after the death of Daniel Wildenstein, went on to contact his son Guy for another examination which then proved successful. On learning that his Blanche Hoschedé-Monet had become a genuine Claude Monet, the previous owner got in touch with his buyer who finally  consented to offer him 1 million dollars as a compensation but he eventually felt he had been taken in since the painting was worth over 20 millions.

The reputation of the Wildenstein family had already been tarnished by Hector Feliciano's innuendoes about Georges Wildenstein's behaviour during World War Two. It suffered more damages after Sylvia Roth, the second wife and widow of Daniel, sued her sons-in-laws Guy and Alec, when she accused them of having dissimulated of a large portion of her husband's fortune estimated at some 10 billion USD.

After Daniel's death, Guy and Alec announced to their mother-in-law that their father's fortune only amounted to 50 million USD and that it was much in her interest to renounce the percentage granted in his will since he was heavily indebted.

After accepting a yearly allowance of 500,000 USD and the possession during her life of a luxurious apartment in Paris, Sylvia Roth changed her mind and decided to lodge a complaint against her sons-in-law claiming that her husband's fortune composed of several properties and some 10,000 paintings had escaped the scrutiny of the French fiscal authorities in being placed in trusts established in safe tax heavens.

Following a series of trials, Guy Wildenstein went on to face some nasty problems resulting from Sylvia Roth's judicial actions, notably when French police conducted a search in the premises of the Wildenstein Institute where they found 30 works of art allegedly missing from the successions of the Rouart and Reinach families for which Daniel and Guy had acted as executors.

Works originating from the Rouart collection had already been discovered some years earlier in the safe of François Daulte in Switzerland where they had been sent by the Wildensteins without the knowledge or consent of the heirs of the deceased Mrs Rouart. Together with some art pieces from the Reinach collection considered as lost during the war other works from her collection were discovered during the search conducted at the Wildenstein Institute which led Guy Wildenstein to be questioned by police.

In addition, despite Sylvia Roth's death at the end of 2010, the legal actions she triggered off continued up to the point that Guy (Alec had died in the meantime) and the other heirs of Daniel Wildenstein, were the object of a tax rectification by the French fiscal authorities amounting to some 600 billion USD.

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