The Prolific Forger Whose Fake Old Masters Fooled the Art World
Art
dealer Eric Hebborn had a golden rule: He never worked with amateurs.
Anyone looking to buy a painting or drawing from his business, Pannini
Galleries, needed to be someone who specialized in art, who believed
themselves able to tell if a work was a genuine
or
. And if after they took that artwork home or sold it to another gallery or a museum, it turned out to be a fake, well, that was on them for failing to recognize a forgery.
or
. And if after they took that artwork home or sold it to another gallery or a museum, it turned out to be a fake, well, that was on them for failing to recognize a forgery.
Hebborn,
who died in 1996, is widely considered to be the greatest art forger of
modern times. By his own estimate, he created over 1,000 forgeries. Only
a handful of these works have been exposed as fakes, in places like the
National Gallery of Denmark and the Morgan Library & Museum, after
passing through the finest auction houses in the world. Some of the most
notable artists Hebborn claimed to have forged, in addition to Brueghel
and Van Dyck, include
,
, and
.
,
, and
.
“I’m
not a crook, I’m just doing what people have always done during the
history of the world,” Hebborn said in the 1991 BBC documentary Portrait of a Master Forger. “[Forgeries] should be enjoyed for what they are, rather than being questioned for what they’re not.”
“Nothing criminal”
Hebborn’s
upbringing combined his astonishing artistic talent with his limitless
capacity for mischief. At the age of eight, he was unjustly accused of
playing with fire—he said he responded to this allegation by actually
setting his school ablaze. He was accepted to the Royal Academy of Arts
and even earned the Rome Prize in engraving. He picked up additional
skills in imitating the
by working as an art restorer after he graduated.
by working as an art restorer after he graduated.
Hebborn
later opened Pannini Galleries with his longtime romantic partner
Graham Smith and developed personal and professional relationships with a
number of key figures in the London art world, including art dealer
Hans Calmann, and Christopher White, a specialist in Old Master drawings
at the oldest commercial gallery in the world, Colnaghi. Hebborn
famously befriended Anthony Blunt, an art advisor for Queen Elizabeth II
who later revealed himself to be a Russian spy (though Hebborn wrote in
his memoir that he was unaware of Blunt’s spying activities). The year
after he opened the gallery, Hebborn moved to Italy.
Insisting
he was not a criminal, Hebborn subscribed to his own moral code. He let
experts make their own opinions about his work without input from him,
and he would charge similar prices for his Old Master forgeries as he
did for the works he made under his own name.
“There
is nothing criminal in making a drawing in any style one wishes, nor is
there anything criminal about asking an expert what he thinks of it,”
Hebborn wrote in his 1991 memoir.
Refusing
to be remorseful for his misdeeds, Hebborn believed the art world itself
was to blame. He looked down on art experts who claimed to be able to
tell whether a work was genuine based on the style, when it’s difficult
enough to sniff out a fake using sophisticated scientific analysis. As a
master draftsman, he believed the ability to draw was crucial in being
able to evaluate a work’s authenticity.
A forger’s downfall
The
master forger’s attention to detail proved to be his own undoing. Many
of his fakes passed muster due to the fact that he used paper from the
time period of the artists he was emulating; he similarly mixed pigments
himself from materials that would have been available in earlier eras.
Konrad Oberhuber, a curator at the National Gallery of Art
in Washington, D.C., noticed two drawings from Colnaghi said to be done
by different artists had identical artistic styles and were done on the
same type of paper. He then alerted a curator at the Morgan Library
& Museum, who noticed similar issues with a drawing there. Colnaghi
then issued a statement about concerns over Old Master drawings
purchased from Hebborn, though the gallery did not publicly name him.
In a letter to The Times of London in
1980, Hebborn wrote: “Instead of stressing how clever the possible
imitations are, it might be more rewarding to examine the abilities of
those who made the attributions and on whose advice large sums of public
money were spent.”
The Colnaghi incident
didn’t slow Hebborn down; he claimed to have made another 500 forgeries
after he was exposed, and sold them to dealers who were perfectly
willing to accept works of questionable provenance. In some cases, these
dealers even asked him to “find” Old Master drawings, which he forged
and then sold to them.
“I think you might
possibly find an honest man,” Hebborn said in the BBC documentary. “I
just don’t think you’ll find an honest man who’s also a dealer.”
The legacy of fakery
Hebborn
was never charged with any crime. His appearance in the 1991 BBC
documentary was among his first steps into the public eye, followed by
the publication of his memoir Drawn to Trouble: Confessions of a Master Forger
that same year. He charged Sotheby’s, Christie’s, Colnaghi, and his
friend Hans Calmann with subpar expertise that allowed his works to make
their way into some of the most notable art institutions in the world.
But
the mystery didn’t end there: Plenty of museums dispute the fact that
works hung in their galleries are actually fakes. Both the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art
have disputed that they own works by Hebborn. But in the absence of
scientific evidence, we may never know how many museums still proudly
display genuine Hebborns, attributed to someone else.
Peter Gerard, a filmmaker working on a series
about the master forger based on Hebborn’s memoir, thinks his story is
still relevant in this “era of questionable authenticity of images.”
Today, the term “fake news” is thrown around casually by the president
of the United States in speeches and on Twitter, and anyone who knows
how to use Photoshop can doctor an image. But Hebborn scoffed at experts
long before the dawn of the “Post-Truth Era.”
The
mythic art world swindler met an unsettling end; in 1996, Hebborn was
found with his skull fractured in Rome, where he had resided for 30
years. Despite rumors that the mafia was involved in his death, no one
has ever been arrested in connection with the crime.
Decades after Hebborn’s death, concerns over authenticity in the art market remain alive and well. Salvator Mundi (ca. 1500), which some experts consider to be
’s last known work, has been pulled from a Louvre show due to concerns over its authenticity. Last month, an Italian painter was arrested in connection to a forgery ring; he stands accused of forging works in the styles of
and
. The Louvre, the National Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Sotheby’s have all been caught up in the scandal.
’s last known work, has been pulled from a Louvre show due to concerns over its authenticity. Last month, an Italian painter was arrested in connection to a forgery ring; he stands accused of forging works in the styles of
and
. The Louvre, the National Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Sotheby’s have all been caught up in the scandal.
“There’s
still this need to discover things, so you can keep the market going,”
Gerard said. “As long as the market has that trust, people are going to
take advantage of it and keep putting forgeries into it.”
Christy Kuesel is an Editorial Intern at Artsy.
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