Podcasts about Wolfgang Beltracchi

German art forger and artist

  • 48PODCASTS
  • 60EPISODES
  • 38mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • May 26, 2025LATEST
Wolfgang Beltracchi

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Best podcasts about Wolfgang Beltracchi

Latest podcast episodes about Wolfgang Beltracchi

Criminels
[REDIFFUSION] Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (1/2)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 27:14


Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice…Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons.Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcastProduction exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.

Criminels
[REDIFFUSION] Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (2/2)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 21:49


Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice…Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons.Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcastProduction exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.

SWR2 Kultur Info
Aus Skandalen lernen: Kunsthistoriker erforscht Geschichte von Kunstfälschungen

SWR2 Kultur Info

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 7:30


Wenn Kunstfälscher auffliegen, dann spektakulär: so wie im Fall von Wolfgang Beltracchi. Henry Keazor untersucht in einem Forschungsprojekt der Universität Heidelberg und des Leibniz-Instituts für europäische Geschichte in Mainz den Umgang mit Kunstfälschungen zu Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts.

Fazit - Kultur vom Tage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Kunstmuseum Kochi - Beltracchi-Fälschung in japanischem Museum aufgeflogen

Fazit - Kultur vom Tage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 6:06


Der verurteilte Kunstbetrüger Wolfgang Beltracchi hat es schon immer gesagt: Es gebe noch mehr seiner Fälschungen in Museen. Das Gemälde "Mädchen mit Schwan" aus einem Haus in Japan, angeblich von Heinrich Campendonk, wurde nun als Fälschung erkannt. Koldehoff, Stefan www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Fazit

Stories of Crime
Genial Kriminell | Teil 2 - #1 Eine Frage des Geldes

Stories of Crime

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 40:16


In der ersten Folge der zweiten Staffel von „Genial kriminell“ beschäftigen sich Anja und Ilja damit, wie alles anfing beim größten Kunstfälscher der deutschen Nachkriegsgeschichte, bei Wolfgang Beltracchi. Und fragen: Was macht Kunst eigentlich so wertvoll? Moderation & Redaktion: Anja Rützel & Ilja Behnisch Redaktion: Timo Nicolas Schnitt: Paula Georgi Produktionshund: Juri Produktion: Pool Artists & Tristan Lehmann Gesamtleitung FYEO: Benjamin Risom, Luca Hirschfeld, Tristan Lehmann Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/stories_of_crime

Les Collections de l'heure du crime
Wolfgang Beltracchi, le faussaire aux 300 tableaux

Les Collections de l'heure du crime

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 29:04


Les « Bonnie et Clyde de l'art » : Wolfgang Beltracchi et sa femme, ont écoulé pendant plus de 30 ans contrefaçons de tableaux de grands maîtres. Il a été condamné à 6 ans de prison en 2010. Invité : Cathy Robin, journaliste et auteure du livre « Les génies du faux ».

Kulturplatz HD
Warum uns Verbrechen in der Kunstwelt faszinieren

Kulturplatz HD

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2024 29:00


Am Kunstmarkt werden jährlich Milliarden umgesetzt. Wo so viel Geld ist, ist viel kriminelles Potenzial. Kunstverbrechen faszinieren: ob es der Raub aus der Bührle Kunstsammlung ist, oder die Bilder des sogenannten Meisterfälschers Wolfgang Beltracchi. «Kulturplatz» über True Crime in der Kunstwelt. Wolfgang Beltracchi narrte die Kunstwelt jahrzehntelang mit gefälschten Meisterwerken. Im Stil grosser Maler wie Matisse oder Max Ernst «erfand» er neue Werke, und schleuste sie für Millionenbeträge in den Kunstmarkt ein – bis er wegen der Verwendung eines falschen Pigments aufflog. 2011 wurde er wegen Betrugs verurteilt und sass eine mehrjährige Haftstrafe ab. Heute malt Beltracchi wieder, aber unter eigenem Namen. «Kulturplatz» besucht ihn in seinem Atelier im luzernischen Meggen und versucht herauszufinden, warum uns True Crime im Kunstmarkt so fasziniert. Das zeigen auch zwei Podcasts, die sich um wahre Kunstdelikte drehen und auf reges Interesse stossen. Bis zu 700'000 Aufrufe haben diese Formate. Der «Deutschlandfunk»-Podcast «Tatort Kunst» deckt auf, worüber die Kunstwelt lieber schweigt. Und auch «Kunstverbrechen» von «NDR Kultur» rollt Fälle auf, bei denen man kaum abschalten kann. Zu Recht, denn Verbrechen im Kunstmarkt-Sektor rangieren auf den vorderen Plätzen. Und bei einem Jahresumsatz (2022) von mehr als 67 Millionen wollen alle mitverdienen, auch die Delinquenten. Ganz anders lief es in der ehemaligen DDR, hier verhielt sich der Staat unredlich Er trickste die eigenen Bürgerinnen und Bürger aus: Denn wer in der DDR Kunst sammelte, musste damit rechnen, enteignet zu werden. Der Raub von Kunst und Antiquitäten durch die Staatssicherheit war gängige Praxis in einem Staat, der dringend Devisen brauchte, um weiter existieren zu können. Auch die Schweiz war eine Drehscheibe im Kunst- und Antiquitätenhandel der DDR. Einige Schweizer Kunsthändler haben mit DDR-Raubkunst Geld verdient. Die Geschäfte liefen meist über einen Stasi-Strohmann mit Waffen-SS-Vergangenheit. Der Bührle Kunstraub und seine Aufarbeitung Der Bührle Kunstraub ist der spektakulärste Kunstraub der Schweizer Geschichte. In einem kleinen Museum am Rande von Zürich wurden 2008 vier Gemälde gestohlen im Wert von 180 Millionen Franken. Wie die Zürcher Polizei mit verdeckten Ermittlern die hochkarätigen Gemälde zurückholte, gehört zu den Erfolgsgeschichten der Schweizer Kriminalgeschichte. Doch wie das genau gelang, war lange nicht klar. Der Autor Stefan Zucker hat den Fall 2023 nochmals aufgerollt und zusammen mit einem Filmteam ein Dokudrama gedreht. «Kulturplatz» wirft einen Blick hinter die Kulisse der Recherche.

Im Gespräch
Marcus Winterbauer - Als Dokumentarfilmer den Menschen nahekommen

Im Gespräch

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 36:40


Ob Meteorologen in Sibirien, Kunstfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi oder Asylentscheider: Der Kameramann Marcus Winterbauer kommt den Menschen nahe. Sie vergessen seine Kamera. Gelernt hat er an der Filmhochschule Babelsberg – als erster Weststudent 1990. Katrin Heisewww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Im Gespräch

Chasseurs de fraude
Episode #8 - Une Fraude Presque Parfaite : Wolfgang Beltracchi

Chasseurs de fraude

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 16:51


L'Histoire a connu de grands fraudeurs, arnaqueurs, escrocs ou encore manipulateurs… En se faisant passer pour ceux qu'ils n'étaient pas, en créant leur propre système économique frauduleux ou encore en vendant des choses qui ne leur appartenaient pas, nombreux ont été ceux qui ont cherché à se faire de l'argent illégalement. Et c'est leur malice qui a fait leur renommée.  Ce sont leurs destins que l'on a souhaité vous raconter dans cette série de podcast appelée Une Fraude Presque Parfaite, imaginée par Finovox.  Embarquez donc pour une vingtaine de minutes et retracez les grandes histoires de fraudeurs avec Anne Lods, Content Manager et conteuse d'histoires.  Dans ce troisième épisode, nous nous intéressons au destin incroyable de l'un des plus grands faussaire du monde de l'art, Wolfgang Beltracchi. Accompagné de sa femme Hélène, il aurait imité 50 des plus grands maîtres de l'histoire, et peint des centaines de faux tableaux.

Kunstverbrechen - True Crime meets Kultur
Der Meisterfälscher Beltracchi (1/2)

Kunstverbrechen - True Crime meets Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 39:40


Der Fall gilt als größter Kunstfälscher-Skandal der deutschen Nachkriegsgeschichte. Wolfgang Beltracchi malt angeblich verschollene Bilder bekannter Künstler und bringt die Fälschungen mit Hilfe seiner Komplizen auf den Markt. Rund 30 Jahre kommt der Fälscher damit durch und wird zum Multimillionär. Aber irgendwann bekommt das "System Beltracchi" Risse. Schreibt uns unter: kunstverbrechen@ndr.de Weitere Infos und Links: Reportage vom Besuch bei Kunsthistoriker und Fälscherjäger Ralph Jentsch mit Fotos aus seinem Archiv, Abbildungen des gefälschten Flechtheim-Etiketts und vom "Roten Bild mit Pferden" https://www.ndr.de/kultur/kunst/Ralph-Jentsch-Den-Kunstfaelschern-auf-der-Spur-,kunstverbrechen118.html Die neusten Folgen von Kunstverbrechen hört ihr hier: https://1.ard.de/kunstverbrechen_ndr

Who ARTed
Wolfgang Beltracchi - The Art of Fraud

Who ARTed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2023 43:15


Wolfgang Beltracchi is possibly the most artful forgers ever to have gotten into the game. While most would create a forgery by meticulously copying every line, shape and color in a known masterpiece, Beltracchi studied the artist then made his own original compositions imagining what the artist would have painted. In this episode, I talked to my fellow art teacher and art crime enthusiast, Emily Fiedler. I showed her two works, one by Beltracchi, and one by Campendonk. I labeled them painting A and painting B to see if she could tell the authentic from the forgery. Look at the works: Painting A | Painting B If you love a good forgery story, check out my previous episode on The Unbelievable Story of Han van Meegeren Check out my other podcast Art Smart | Rainbow Puppy Science Lab Who ARTed is an Airwave Media Podcast. If you are interested in advertising on this or any other Airwave Media show, email: advertising@airwavemedia.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Die letzte Videothek
#26: Wolfgang Beltracchi porträtiert Candyman

Die letzte Videothek

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 52:41


Unser Podcast ist allseits berühmt und berüchtigt, zumindest wenn es darum geht, vom Hölzchen aufs Stöckchen zu kommen - Wolfgang Beltracchi ist ein deutscher Maler und der wohl berühmteste (ehemalige) Kunstfälscher aller Zeiten, welcher in einem der größten Kunstfälscherprozesse seit dem Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs wegen gewerbsmäßigen Bandenbetrugs zu einer langen Haftstrafe verurteilt wurde. Wirklich sauer sein kann man deswegen nicht, außer man ist stinkreich und hat zufälligerweise einen gefakten Max Ernst erstanden. Ansonsten gehören Wolle alle Sympathien. Über den in Höxter geborenen Meisterfälscher schlagen wir einen langen Bogen in Richtung Cabrini-Green in Chicago und Nia DaCosta´s 2021er Version des Candyman: In der Horror-Fortsetzung erweckt ein Künstler im gentrifizierten Chicago die düstere Legende des Candyman von Neuem. Wir sehen, die Kunstwelt scheint ein verdammt merkwürdiger Ort zu sein. LINKS AUF DEM VERKAUFSTRESEN: Wolfgang Beltracchi - Der Meisterfälscher https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9w1yXob308 Wolfgang Beltracchi porträtiert Christoph Waltz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2P3VwqnjWY Candyman (2021) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFXRFY5V8qY Fragen beantworten unsere Mitarbeiter gerne unter: dieletztevideothek@gmail.com

Musik für einen Gast
Wolfgang Beltracchi, Künstler

Musik für einen Gast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2023 60:35


Mit gefälschten Bildern bekannter Maler wurde Wolfgang Beltracchi weltberühmt. Verurteilt als Kunstfälscher sass er eine längere Haftstrafe ab. Nun macht der Maler mit digitaler Kunst von sich reden. Über Nacht flog Wolfgang Beltracchi als einer der grössten Kunstfälscher der Nachkriegszeit auf. Zum Verhängnis wurde ihm die Anwendung einer Farbe, die zur Lebenszeit des Malers, dessen Bild er fälschte, noch nicht existierte. Mit seinen Fälschungen versetzte Beltracchi Museen, Sammler und Handel gleichermassen in Aufruhr. Wenngleich die Rechtsprechung seine Fälschungen als gewerbsmässigen Betrug taxierte, und er dafür mit Gefängnis bestraft wurde, erfuhr der Maler auch Sympathie für sein Wirken. Mit Hannes Hug unterhält sich Wolfgang Beltracchi über seine Leidenschaft für die Malerei und die Zukunft seiner Kunst. Erstsendung: 22. Mai 2022

Wie tickt die Kunstszene? Der Kunst-Podcast.
Plauderstunde mit dem Meisterfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi

Wie tickt die Kunstszene? Der Kunst-Podcast.

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2023 66:16


Herzliche willkommen zurück nach meinem Urlaub. Fulminant starten wir wieder mit einer weiteren spannenden Folge in meinem Kunstpodcast. In meinem heutigen Gespräch plaudere ich mit Wolfgang und Helene Beltracchi darüber, was Wolfgang statt Meisterfälscher zu werden noch alles beruflich hätte machen können. Wir sprechen über Moral und Wolfgang erklärt, wie er reagiert hätte, hätte er eines seiner Fälschungen gekauft.Wir reden über die Verhaftung, der keine Beweise zugrunde lagen und darüber, ob es Wolfgang gelungen ist, den von ihm gemalten Campendonk, mit dem er seinerzeit aufflog, zurückzuerhalten.  Wolfgang und Helene sprechen ausserdem über den heutigen Kunstmarkt und den Verfall des Kunstwertes. 

Ridiculous Crime
When I Paint His Masterpiece: The Beltracchis

Ridiculous Crime

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 45:21


Like Elmyr de Hory before him, Wolfgang Beltracchi loved painting other artists' works. The "lost" masterpieces were a hot commodity, generating riches for Beltracchi and the rest of the art world. He could forge the works of any genius painter, but he couldn't forge a simple label. Oh, well. It was fun while it lasted.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Erwischt! Zeitreise ins Verbrechen
Zwischen-Fall 1 - Wolfgang Beltracchi - Der Meisterfälscher

Erwischt! Zeitreise ins Verbrechen

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 18:38


Der Podcast zur Hörspielserie "Erwischt! Zeitreise ins Verbrechen". Überall, wo es Hörspiele gibt! In der neuen Kategorie der Zwischen-Fälle erfahrt ihr spannende Hintergründe zu wahren Verbrechen, die noch gar nicht lange zurückliegen. Diesmal: Wolfgang Beltracchi.  Er gilt als Jahrhundertfälscher. Fast 30 Jahre lang fälschte Wolfgang Beltracchi die Bilder weltberühmter Maler und führte Kunstsammler und Experten an der Nase herum. Man schätzt, dass er mit seinen Bildern 30 – 50 Millionen Euro verdient hat. Wie er das schaffte und durch welchen kleinen Fehler er schließlich erwischt wurde, erfährst du in dieser Folge.   Wenn du miterleben willst, wie David, Jonas und Emma viele spannende Verbrechen am eigenen Leib erleben und dazu durch die Zeit reisen, dann hör dir die dazugehörige Hörspielserie an! Mehr Infos unter www.erwischt-zeitreise.de   David, Jonas und Emma findest du auch unter: www.instagram.com/erwischt_die_podcaster Gesamtleitung: KB&B Family Marketing Experts und Leonine Kids Buch & Regie: Wolfgang Adenberg Aufnahme, Schnitt, Sounddesign & Mix: Superhearo Audio Musik: Tom Steinbrecher Schlagzeug: Marc Nathaniel   Es sprachen: David: Julian Greis Jonas: Tim Kreuer Emma: Katharina Gast

Das Kalenderblatt
27.10.2011: Der Meisterfälscher Beltracchi wird verurteilt

Das Kalenderblatt

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 4:11


Wie viele Meisterwerke er gefälscht hat, ist unklar. Verurteilt wurde er für 14 Fälschungen: Wolfgang Beltracchi, einer der berühmtesten Kunstfälscher seit dem Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs. So gekonnt ahmte er künstlerische Handschriften von Malern nach, dass er auch anerkannte Experten täuschte.

Wie tickt die Kunstszene? Der Kunst-Podcast.
Ich spreche mit dem Meisterfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi und seiner Frau Helene

Wie tickt die Kunstszene? Der Kunst-Podcast.

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2022 81:07


Was macht der Meisterfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi und seine Frau Helene heute? Wie hat sich ihr Leben verändert? Was vermissen Sie von ihrem damaligen Leben?Mein Gespräch mit den erfolgreichsten Kunstfälschern unserer Zeit.Ausgestattet mit unglaublichem Talent kann Wolfgang van Gogh, Picasso und Kollegen, so gut nachmalen und interpretieren, dass die grössten Experten der Kunstwelt es nicht bemerkten. 2% Titanweiss im wohl «schönsten» Campendonk, dem Meisterwerk «Rotes Bild mit Pferden», haben alles auffliegen lassen. Dieses Weiss gab es zu Zeiten Campendonks noch nicht. Das wird den beiden schliesslich zum Verhängnis und sie wurden in einem Aufsehen erregenden Prozess zu mehrjährigen Haftstrafen verurteilt.

Criminels
Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (3/4)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 11:34


Troisième partie: années d'opulence, excès de confiance. Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice… Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons. Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcast Production exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane

Criminels
Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (2/4)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 13:47


Deuxième partie: les Bonnie & Clyde de l'art. Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice… Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons. Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcast Production exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane

Criminels
Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (1/4)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 13:56


Première partie: escroc de père en fils. Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice… Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons. Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcast Production exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane

Criminels
Faussaires - Wolfgang Beltracchi, prince des faussaires (4/4)

Criminels

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 10:42


Quatrième partie: jugés mais adulés. Pendant 30 ans, l'allemand Wolfgang Beltracchi a déjoué le radar des experts, des galeristes et des collectionneurs en orchestrant l'une des plus grandes arnaques du marché de l'art. En copiant des tableaux de maître, il aura récolté la somme vertigineuse de 30 millions d'euros avant d'être rattrapé par la justice… Cet épisode de Faussaires est co-produit par Initial Studio et Studio 120, adapté du documentaire audiovisuel “Un faussaire de génie”, produit par Studio 120, écrit et réalisé par Adeline Dessons. Bonne écoute ! Pour découvrir nos autres podcasts, suivez Initial Studio sur Instagram et Facebook. Crédits du podcast Production exécutive du podcast : Initial Studio Production éditoriale : Sarah Koskievic Montage : Camille Legras et Victor Benhamou Illustration : Initial Studio Avec la voix d'Elsa Hamnane

Sparkr Podcast
#23 (GER): Wolfgang Beltracchi über Kunst, NFTs und einen 450 Millionen Dollar Fake

Sparkr Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 78:00


In dieser Episode des Sparkr Podcasts hatte ich das Vergnügen, mich mit dem berühmt berüchtigten Künstler Wolfgang Beltracchi zu unterhalten. Wolfgang Beltracchi ist ein deutscher Künstler und ehemaliger Kunstfälscher. Über 40 Jahre malte er Gemälde in der künstlerischen Handschrift bekannter Maler aus vier Jahrhunderten. Anerkannte Kunstexperten, internationale Auktionshäuser und Kunstmuseen beurteilten seine Werke als authentische Gemälde der jeweiligen Künstler und sie wurden für Millionen versteigert. Seine Karriere als Künstler reicht bis in seine Kindheit zurück. Schon als 12-Jähriger hat der Sohn eines Kirchenmalers sich mit den ganz Grossen wie Picasso auseinander gesetzt und sich über Jahrzehnte weitreichendes Wissen über Kunst und den Kunstmarkt angeeignet. Bekanntheit erlangte er spätestens 2011, als der Schwindel aufflog, Beltracchi als Jahrhundertfälscher in die Geschichte einging und zu sechs Jahren Freiheitsentzug verurteilt wurde. Diese packende Geschichte ist bestens dokumentiert und spannend erzählt in zahlreichen Büchern und Filmen. Als stets neugieriger und angstfreier Künstler hat er vor Kurzem auch mit einem NFT-Projekt von sich reden lassen, welches sich dem teuersten je verkauften Gemälde "Salvator Mundi" als Inspiration bedient. In diesem Podcast Gespräch, das wir in seinem Garten und Atelier aufgezeichnet haben, reden wir über Kunst und Kreativität, erhalten tiefe Einblicke in die Funktionsweise des Kunstmarktes, erfahren, was Beltracchi an NFTs fasziniert und wie ein 450 Millionen Dollar Fake zum teuersten Gemälde der Welt werden konnte. All das gepaart mit persönlichen Erinnerungen des Künstlers auf sein ereignisreiches Leben, die ich so noch nirgends sonst gehört habe. *** Sparkr Blog: Finden Sie weitere spannende Inhalte auf dem Blog von Sparkr: www.sparkr.ch/blog. Wie zum Beispiel ein praktisches und kompaktes Handbuch mit allerlei nützlichen Selbstmanagement-Methoden und Tipps für weniger Stress und mehr Produktivität: https://sparkr.ch/selfmanagement/ Auch als kostenloses PDF auf Deutsch: https://mailchi.mp/02fdfae49ab2/selbstmanagement Oder als Kindle eBook auf Englisch: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09BG2Q3CG/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_F0PZA8GG003M0M0GGEK5 *** Sparkr ist eine Agentur für Change Maker. Sparkr und der Gastgeber dieser Sendung - Christian Lundsgaard-Hansen - dienen als Sparrings-Partner oder Workshop-Gastgeber für Führungskräfte und Innovator:innen.

Musik für einen Gast
Wolfgang Beltracchi, Künstler

Musik für einen Gast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2022 60:35


Mit gefälschten Bildern bekannter Maler wurde Wolfgang Beltracchi weltberühmt. Verurteilt als Kunstfälscher sass er eine längere Haftstrafe ab. Nun macht der Maler mit digitaler Kunst von sich reden.  Über Nacht flog Wolfgang Beltracchi als einer der grössten Kunstfälscher der Nachkriegszeit auf. Zum Verhängnis wurde ihm die Anwendung einer Farbe, die zur Lebenszeit des Malers, dessen Bild er fälschte, noch nicht existierte. Mit seinen Fälschungen versetzte Beltracchi Museen, Sammler und Handel gleichermassen in Aufruhr. Wenngleich die Rechtsprechung seine Fälschungen als gewerbsmässigen Betrug taxierte, und er dafür mit Gefängnis bestraft wurde, erfuhr der Maler auch Sympathie für sein Wirken. Mit Hannes Hug unterhält sich Wolfgang Beltracchi über seine Leidenschaft für die Malerei und die Zukunft seiner Kunst.

Ende der Welt - Die tägliche Glosse

Wahre Liebe kostet immer Überwindung: Frank Plasbergs Frau zum Beispiel muss sich neuerdings auf eine handgeschnitzte Klobrille setzen. Andere setzten sich bekanntlich aus Liebe zur Ruhe, wie Grace Kelly, oder ins Gefängnis, wie die Frau des berühmten Kunstfälschers Wolfgang Beltracchi. Und Orpheus ging für Eurydike nicht nur zur Toilette und auch nicht nur runter in die Kanalisation sondern noch tiefer, dahin, wo sie Seelen geklärt werden. Womöglich ist die Wahre Liebe überhaupt nur durch die Klobrille erkennbar. Eine Glosse von Peter Jungblut.

Crypto Daily
Bitcoin Predictions, Miner Hacks, and Art Forgery | Oct 8 2021

Crypto Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 4:43


In this episode of Daily Crypto we discuss the recent behavior of Bitcoin, why it's peak then dropped, and why we might be on the verge of a historic bull run, plus one skeptic's thoughts of Bitcoin's true price, how miners are getting around graphic cards low hash rates, and a master art forger who is entering the NFT world.  Episode resources: Bitcoin Miners Send An Unusual Amount Of Coins To Exchanges Bitcoin bull run: analysts predict record rally to end 2021 Bitcoin price spikes 10% and surpasses $ 55,000 thanks to billionaire George Soros Bitcoin market capitalisation hits $1 trillion surpassing Facebook, Tesla Bitcoin is 'overpriced' as it is worth no more than $28k, says ByteTree's investment chief Crypto miners have busted through Nvidia's LHR graphics cards yet again Infamous German art forger Wolfgang Beltracchi is selling recreations of the world's most valuable painting as a collection of NFTs Blockchains vie for NFT market, but Ethereum still dominates — Report See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cryptodailyshow/message

Daily Crypto Report
"Wolfgang Beltracchi enters the NFT scene" October 8, 2021

Daily Crypto Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 3:17


Today's blockchain and cryptocurrency news Brought to you by ungrocery.com Bitcoin is down .5% at $55,260 Ethereum is down .5% at $3,618 and Cardano is down .5% at $2.27 Fantom up 26% Harmony up 21% Famed art forger Wolfgang Beltracchi is stepping into the NFT market Bitcoin mining firms in North America are stockpiling Bitcoin. Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming discloses bitcoin purchase between $50k and $100k. Bloomberg's report on Tether.

Artips
La belle arnaque !

Artips

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 2:22


Ce podcast fait partie d'une série de 5 histoires captivantes à la poursuite des plus célèbres voleurs et faussaires d'art ! Pour retrouver les épisodes précédents, rendez-vous sur artips.fr/podcast. À la semaine prochaine pour l'épisode suivant. "Escroquerie : une bonne affaire qui a rencontré une mauvaise foi." Alfred Capus Pour voir tout ça en image, c'est là : http://arti.ps/podbeltracchi Retrouvez le texte de cette anecdote : http://arti.ps/anecbeltracchi Pour en savoir plus : Sur l'histoire des Beltracchi : http://arti.ps/beltracchi1 Les Beltracchi en entretien à la radio : http://arti.ps/beltracchi2 Artips est une production Artly Production // Lu avec délectation par Antoine Leiris // Amoureusement mis en musique par Benoît Perret / Omnia Studio // Monté et réalisé avec talent par Khrystyna Burak // Anecdote concoctée par Gaëlle Hubert et adaptée par Benjamin Billiet, Antoine Leiris et Delphine Peresan-Roudil // Un grand merci pour ses conseils avisés à Vivien Demeyere, et à Célia, Agathe et Pierre de Artips pour avoir prêté les voix du jingle

Was mit Kunst - Ein Podcast von und mit Johann König | Podimo
Neuer Podcast mit Johann König: "Kunst Crime"

Was mit Kunst - Ein Podcast von und mit Johann König | Podimo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 1:27


Vom Raub der Mona Lisa, der Fälschung der van Goghs und dem Betrüger, der Sammler um Millionen betrog: In “Kunst Crime – Fälscher, Diebe, Betrüger” geht Johann König gemeinsam mit seinen Gästen den spektakulärsten Verbrechen in der Kunstszene auf den Grund. Jede Woche eine Folge, nur auf Podimo. 30 Tage kostenlos testen: https://podimo.com/de/Kunstcrime

TBC - To Be Cast
ART. 8 - THE ART OF KUNST: Duty Free Art

TBC - To Be Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2020


TBC über den Abgang Christiane Arp‘s bei Vogue Deutsch, Umstrukturierungen bei Condé Nast, Hito Steyerl's „Duty Free Art“ und die Hintergründe und Abgründe des Kunstmarktes.Weiterführende Links:Hito Steyerl Buch “Duty Free Art”: https://www.diaphanes.de/titel/duty-free-art-5387 Hito Steyerl bei Esther Schipper: https://www.estherschipper.com/artists/102-the-work-of-hito-steyerl/biography/Kunstfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfgang_BeltracchiPower 100 - Art Review: https://artreview.com/power-100/Finding Van Gogh Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/finding-van-gogh-deutsche-version/id1477331939Gerhard Richter: https://www.gerhard-richter.com/de/art/paintings/Genieve Figgis: https://www.artsy.net/artist/genieve-figgisBunny Rogers im Hamburger Bahnhof: https://www.smb.museum/ausstellungen/detail/bunny-rogers/Michael Krebber: http://www.artnet.de/k%C3%BCnstler/michael-krebber/

KATZENGOLD. BREMENS MEISTER PODCAST.
#19 KUNST - Mark Twain, der Käseblattvolontär von Nörten-Hardenberg

KATZENGOLD. BREMENS MEISTER PODCAST.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2020 82:13


HURZ! Da sind sie wieder, die (Joe) biden Bremer Keinkünstler Sebastian und Nils und haben Euch etwas mitgebracht: KUNST. Freut Euch auf: Ein sensationelles Intro mit Glockenspiel und Gesang (#alltimeclassic). Sebastians Buch und seine Schwärmerei von seinem Volontariat mit Mark Twain beim Nörten-Hardenberger Käseblatt. Die Geschichte wie Olaf Scholz zu Sebastians Steuerberaterin wurde. Nils' Defintion von künstlicher Intelligenz. Hintergründe zu Wolfgang Beltracchi und wie er mit Kunstfälschungen € 50 Mio. Gewinn gemacht hat, und und und. Das alles und noch viel mehr, erfahrt ihr in der zum ersten Mal geschnittenen Episode rund um das Thema Kunst. KATZENGOLD. BREMENS MEISTER PODCAST. Zum Hieressen oder zum Mitnehmen? Kontaktdaten hinterlegen nicht vergessen. HURZ!

Lrnings - Der Podcast für #Business & #Karriere
#27 Quick Wins: Fälschen & Kopieren - Was man von Wolfgang Beltracchi lernen kann

Lrnings - Der Podcast für #Business & #Karriere

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2020 13:47


Wer wäre nicht gerne wie Elon Musk, Oprah Winfrey oder Steve Jobs? Vorbilder zu haben ist das Eine, ein eigenes Meisterwerk zu erschaffen, eine völlig andere Nummer. Wolfgang Beltracchi ist einer der erfolgreichsten Kunstfälscher der Welt. Warum? Weil er nicht gefälscht hat, sondern verstanden. Aus der Netflix–Doku über seine Verbrechen kann man lernen, wie man wirklich in die Fußstapfen seiner Vorbilder tritt. 1961, Höxter, Nordrhein-Westfalen: Der zehnjährige Wolfgang schaut seinem Vater zu; einem Kirchenmaler, der sich in seiner Freizeit an den Werken alter Meister abarbeitet. Wolfgangs Vater studiert die Meisterwerke und versucht, sie detailgetreu nachzuahmen. Natürlich ist das Ergebnis den berühmten Vorbildern nie ebenbürtig. Aber darum geht es ja auch nicht, im Feierabend. Mit 14 war Wolfgang in der Lage, Picassos zu kopieren. Vorbildern nachzueifern, reichte ihm bald nicht mehr. Doch mit einer Karriere als Künstler tat er sich schwer. Er brach die Kunstschule ab, um sich in alternativen Wohngemeinschaften Sex, Drugs & Rock 'n' Roll zu widmen. Er reiste durch Europa und Nordafrika, verkaufte hin und wieder ein eigenes Gemälde, aber auch mal eine Fälschung, um an Geld zu kommen. Wolfgang Beltracchi wurde zu einem der bekanntesten und erfolgreichsten Kunstfälscher der Welt. 200 seiner Werke sind nach wie vor im Umlauf – unidentifiziert. Bis heute, nach sechs Jahren Haft wegen Betrugs, steht er im Museum manchmal vor seinen eigenen Bildern. Er verrät nicht, welche es sind. Aus Angst vor Schadenersatzforderungen. Wie schaffte Beltracchi es, 40 Jahre lang Experten auf der ganzen Welt hinter's Licht zu führen? Beltracchis Prinzip war es nicht, die Gemälde der Künstler zu kopieren, sondern Lücken in ihrem Werk zu füllen. Er erfand Bilder, die sich an ihren Schaffensphasen orientierten oder so lange verschollen waren, dass die Kunstwelt nur noch ihre Titel kannte. Dabei beherrschte er den Stil seiner Vorbilder in Perfektion. Dem SPIEGEL gab er auf die Frage, warum er das eigentlich so gut könne, die Antwort: "Ich glaube, die wichtigste Voraussetzung ist, das Wesen eines Kunstwerks zu erfassen. Man schaut es sich an, nimmt es quasi in sich auf, man muss sehend verstehen können, ohne darüber nachzudenken, wie das gemacht wurde." Beltracchi las Bücher über seine Vorbilder, er besuchte Museen und die Orte, an denen sie ihr Leben verbracht hatten: "Ich hab mir das Dorf angeschaut, den Strand, das Licht, die Atmosphäre und die Stimmung jenes Sommers erspürt. [...] Ich wollte das kreative Zentrum des Malers so erreichen und kennenlernen, dass ich die Entstehung seiner Bilder mit seinen Augen und eben auch das neue, von mir gemalte Bild mit seinen Augen sah - und zwar bevor ich es malte." Beltracchi verstand, wie seine Vorbilder malten, wie sie dachten, fühlten, die Welt sahen. Er machte sich ihr Wesen zu Eigen. So, wie ein Schauspieler ganz in seiner Rolle aufgehen kann, bis die Grenze zwischen Realität und Fiktion verwischt. Natürlich will niemand im wörtlichen Sinne Elon Musk, Oprah Winfrey oder Steve Jobs werden. Wohl aber würden wir gerne ihre besten Eigenschaften zu unseren Eigenschaften machen. Um das zu erreichen, genügt es nicht, motivierende Zitate auf Instagram zu lesen. Das reicht nur als Hobby für den Feierabend. Wo Oprah Strandurlaub macht, soll ihre Sache bleiben. Doch wer ihre Größe erreichen will, tut gut daran, sich so intensiv mit ihrem Leben und ihrem Werk zu beschäftigen, wie möglich. Oder eben mit dem von Wolfgang Beltracchi, der mutmaßlich mehr als 50 Millionen Euro damit verdiente, in einer Sache der Beste der Welt zu werden. Was du noch von ihm lernen kannst, fasst dir Phillip Böndel bei Lrnings zusammen: Lrnings Quick Wins: Fälschen & Kopieren - Was man von Wolfgang Beltracchi lernen kann Alle Lrnings & Quellen findest du in den Shownotes und auf www.lrnings.de

hr2 Doppelkopf
"Die Fantasie der Fälscher beeindruckt uns" | Kunsthistoriker Henry Keazor über die Geschichte der Kunstfälschung

hr2 Doppelkopf

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 51:30


Der Heidelberger Professor für Neuere und Neueste Kunstgeschichte Henry Keazor hat sich mit der Geschichte der Kunstfälschung beschäftigt. Wenn das Wort "Kunstfälschung" fällt, denkt der Laie zunächst vielleicht an Wolfgang Beltracchi, den Fälscher-Hippie, der Museen und Kunstexperten mit seinen selbstgemalten Expressionisten hereingelegt hat. (Wdh. vom 04.08.2016)

hr2 Doppelkopf
"Ich bin nicht wegen gefälschter Gemälde verurteilt worden" | Maler Wolfgang Beltracchi ein Urkundenfälscher

hr2 Doppelkopf

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2020 50:20


Der Maler Wolfgang Beltracchi ist als sogenannter Jahrhundert-Fälscher berühmt geworden. Fast 40 Jahre lang malte er in der Handschrift anderer Künstler, fälschte deren Unterschrift und verkaufte rund 300 Werke in Millionenhöhe. (Wdh. vom 17.09.2019)

Persönlich
Der Kunstfälscher Beltracchi und seine Komplizin

Persönlich

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2020 50:15


Wolfgang Beltracchi gilt als einer der grössten Kunstfälscher der Geschichte. 40 Jahre lang imitierte er grosse Meister und gab die Bilder als Originale aus. Seine Ehefrau Helene schleuste sie geschickt in den Kunstmarkt ein. Geboren ist Wolfgang Beltracchi 1951 in Westfalen in Deutschland. Sein Vater war Kirchenmaler und Restaurator und führte Klein-Wolfgang ins Kunsthandwerk ein. Schon mit 14 Jahren malte er seinen ersten Picasso. Eigentlich wollte Wolfgang Beltracchi Rockstar werden, er durchlebte wilde Jugendjahre, zog als Hippie durch Europa und liess nach dem Motto «Sex, Drugs und Rock'n'Roll» nichts aus. Nach und nach begann Wolfgang Beltracchi, Bilder in der Handschrift grosser Meister zu malen und sie für viel Geld in den Kunsthandel einzuschleusen. Seine grosse Liebe Helene 1992 lernte er seine grosse Liebe und spätere Komplizin kennen: Helene Beltracchi. «Er erzählte mir nach drei Tagen, welchen Beruf er ausübt», lacht sie. «Ich war natürlich geschockt, fand es aber irgendwie auch witzig.» Ab sofort war sie zuständig für den Verkauf der Bilder und die Kontakte zu Galerien und Auktionshäusern. Der Schwindel flog 2010 auf, beide landeten in Deutschland im Gefängnis und mussten Millionen zurückzahlen. Ihr Leben am Vierwaldstättersee Seit ihrem Gefängnisaufenthalt leben Beltracchis im luzernischen Meggen am Vierwaldstättersee. Sie haben zwei erwachsene Kinder. Im Rahmen der Sommerserie hören Sie die Wiederholung vom 13. Oktober 2019.

Die Spur der Täter - Der True Crime Podcast des MDR
Beltracchi – Der größte Kunstfälscher oder einfach ein Krimineller?

Die Spur der Täter - Der True Crime Podcast des MDR

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 74:04


Für viele ist Wolfgang Beltracchi ein Held, der die Kunstszene entlarvte. Doch mit seinen Fälschungen erbeutete er Millionen. Im Podcast rekonstruiert Ermittler René Allonge, wie er Beltracchi das Handwerk legen konnte.

I Can Steal That!
EP 07 Wolfgang Beltracchi

I Can Steal That!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 62:24


Pete is joined by comedian and AVN Award Winner Eitan Levine on this episode where they discuss the greatest art forger of all time, Wolfgang Beltracchi and his career of deception that got him spots in every major art museum and in prison.

Futility Closet
286-If Day

Futility Closet

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 33:19


In 1942, Manitoba chose a startling way to promote the sale of war bonds -- it staged a Nazi invasion of Winnipeg. For one gripping day, soldiers captured the city, arrested its leaders, and oppressed its citizens. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll describe If Day, which one observer called "the biggest and most important publicity stunt" in Winnipeg's history. We'll also consider some forged wine and puzzle over some unnoticed car options. Intro: In 1649 Claude Mellan carved a portrait of Jesus with a single line. A pebble discovered in southern Africa may be the earliest evidence of an aesthetic sense among our ancestors. Sources for our feature on If Day: Jody Perrun, The Patriotic Consensus: Unity, Morale, and the Second World War in Winnipeg, 2014. Darren Sean Wershler-Henry, Guy Maddin's My Winnipeg, 2010. Michael Newman, "February 19, 1942: If Day," Manitoba History 13 (Spring 1987), 27-30. Graham Chandler, "If Day: The Occupation of Manitoba," Legion Feb. 1, 2017. Ted Burch, "The Day the Nazis Took Over Winnipeg," Maclean's, Sept. 10, 1960. "Winnipeg Is 'Conquered,'" Life 12:10 (March 9, 1942), 30-32. "Tips for Spotting Nazis," National Post, May 10, 2019. Tristin Hopper, "Rare Photos From 'If Day' — The Time Winnipeg Staged a Full-Scale Nazi Invasion of Itself," National Post, Feb. 21, 2019. Don Pelechaty, "Remembrance Day Memories of 1942," Central Plains Herald-Leader, Nov. 9, 2017, A.17. Mike Huen, "'If Day' Currency Blast From the Possible Past," Winnipeg Free Press, June 30, 2017, E3. Christian Cassidy, "When War Came to Winnipeg: 75 Years Ago, City Staged Bold and Hugely Successful Publicity Stunt," Winnipeg Free Press, Feb. 19, 2017, 1. "75 Years Ago, Winnipeggers Said 'What If?", Winnipeg Free Press, Feb. 17, 2017. Karen Howlett, "Fundraiser Sees Winnipeg Invaded by Fake Nazis," Globe and Mail, Feb. 19, 2014, A.2. Alexandra Paul, "When War Came to Winnipeg," Winnipeg Free Press, Feb. 19, 2012, A.4. Ron Robinson, "The Day Nazis Came to Winnipeg," National Post, June 21, 2008, A.23. "George Waight, 93 Was Banker, Actor," Toronto Star, Dec. 17, 1985, B5. "George Waight, Bank Executive, Was Actor," Globe and Mail, Dec. 17, 1985, A.14. "Nazi Army's 'Invasion' of Winnipeg Remembered," Regina [Saskatchewan] Leader-Post, March 4, 1985, A5. "If Day," University of Manitoba Digital Collections. Listener mail: Encyclopaedia Britannica, "Wolfgang Beltracchi" (accessed Feb. 22, 2020). Christopher Goodwin, "Wolfgang Beltracchi: A Real Con Artist," Times, May 10, 2014. "Convicted Forger Claims He Faked 'About 50' Artists," BBC News, March 7, 2012. Ben Kenigsberg, "Review: 'Beltracchi: The Art of Forgery' Tells How a Swindler Fooled the World," New York Times, Aug. 18, 2015. Wikipedia, "Rudy Kurniawan" (accessed Feb. 22, 2020). Ed Cumming, "The Great Wine Fraud," Guardian, Sept. 10, 2016. Tatiana Schlossberg, "Wine Dealer Sentenced to 10 Years for Defrauding Clients," New York Times, Aug. 7, 2014. William K. Rashbaum and Matt Flegenheimer, "Renowned Wine Dealer Accused of Trying to Sell Counterfeits," New York Times, March 8, 2012. "Third of Rare Scotch Whiskies Tested Found to Be Fake," BBC News, Dec. 20, 2018. "Whisky Sour? Rare or Fake Scotch Exposed by Carbon-Dating," Reuters, Dec. 20, 2018. Mindy Weisberger, "Nuclear Fallout Exposes Fake 'Antique' Whisky," LiveScience, Jan. 27, 2020. David Williams, "Scottish Scientists Use Radioactive Isotopes From Old Nuclear Tests to Find Counterfeit Whisky. More Than 40 Percent of What They Tested Is Fake," CNN, Jan. 24, 2020. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Brian Voeller, who sent these corroborating links (warning -- these spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!

Crimeficionados
Episode 14- Wolfgang & Helene Beltracchi Part 2- The Perfect Plan Unravels

Crimeficionados

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2020 44:29


Travis & Lee discuss the circumstances that led to the detection of Wolfgang Beltracchi's forged paintings, and the fall out that followed.Support the show (http://patreon.com/crimeficionados)

Crimeficionados
Episode 13- Wolfgang & Helene Beltracchi Part 1- The Charmed Life of an Art Forger

Crimeficionados

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 40:58


Travis & Lee introduce the story of art forger, Wolfgang Beltracchi, who, along with his wife Helene, lived a decadent lifestyle based on the proceeds of his criminal endeavor that shook the art world to its core.Support the show (http://patreon.com/crimeficionados)

Zwei Schuss Drei Treffer
#7 Was macht die deutsche Literatur?

Zwei Schuss Drei Treffer

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 61:42


Von Andrej Tarkowskijs "Nostalghia" über Hochkultur zu Rilke, Wolfgang Beltracchi und Joseph Beuys. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/2schuss3treffer/message

Wirtschaft – detektor.fm
Helene & Wolfgang Beltracchi – „Im Knast bringen die dich auf Null“

Wirtschaft – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019 35:48


Helene und Wolfgang Beltracchi gelten als größte Kunstfälscher der jüngeren Geschichte. Mit Bildern, die Künstler so gemalt haben könnten, verdienten sie Millionen – bis sie verhaftet wurden und in die Privatinsolvenz mussten. Über ihr altes und neues Leben sprechen sie in „Reden ist Geld“. [0:18] Begrüßung [2:00] Helenes & Wolfgangs Geldbeutel [5:30] die Beltracchis in einer Minute [7:18] Rauskommen aus dem Knast [8:30] Geld verdienen nach dem Knast [12:14] das schlechte Gewissen? [12:54] Kunstmarkt [14:56] die Anfänge des Fälschen [17:14] das Kennenlernen [21:03] Südfrankreich [26:45] der Anfang vom Ende [27:29] Reinkommen in den Knast [33:03] Und jetzt? [35:21] VerabschiedungDer Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/wirtschaft/reden-ist-geld-helene-wolfgang-beltracchi

Reden ist Geld – detektor.fm
Helene & Wolfgang Beltracchi – „Im Knast bringen die dich auf Null“

Reden ist Geld – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019 35:48


Helene und Wolfgang Beltracchi gelten als größte Kunstfälscher der jüngeren Geschichte. Mit Bildern, die Künstler so gemalt haben könnten, verdienten sie Millionen – bis sie verhaftet wurden und in die Privatinsolvenz mussten. Über ihr altes und neues Leben sprechen sie in „Reden ist Geld“. [0:18] Begrüßung [2:00] Helenes & Wolfgangs Geldbeutel [5:30] die Beltracchis in einer Minute [7:18] Rauskommen aus dem Knast [8:30] Geld verdienen nach dem Knast [12:14] das schlechte Gewissen? [12:54] Kunstmarkt [14:56] die Anfänge des Fälschen [17:14] das Kennenlernen [21:03] Südfrankreich [26:45] der Anfang vom Ende [27:29] Reinkommen in den Knast [33:03] Und jetzt? [35:21] VerabschiedungDer Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/wirtschaft/reden-ist-geld-helene-wolfgang-beltracchi

True Story
Les Beltracchi et leurs peintures "à la façon de"

True Story

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2019 9:41


C’est l’une des plus grandes supercheries de l’histoire de l’art. Un couple allemand au look hippie chic, fait croire qu’il aurait hérité d’une collection de toiles d’artistes renommés, jusque là disparues. Lui, peint des œuvres “à la façon de”, et elle, s’occupe de leur vente. Leurs noms: Wolfgang et Hélène Beltracchi. Découvrez leur True Story.Jeunesse et influences Wolfgang Beltracchi naît en Allemagne en 1951 sous le nom de Fischer. Le jeune garçon baigne dès l’enfance dans le milieu de l’art. Son père est peintre d’églises et restaure des oeuvres d’art. A l’âge de 17 ans, le jeune garçon turbulent est expulsé de l’école ordinaire et se lance dans des études d’art. En 1973, Wolfgang laisse tomber son école pour mener une vie nomade en Europe et Afrique du Nord en adoptant l’esprit du mouvement hippie. Il avouera plus tard avoir régulièrement consommé des drogues hallucinogènes.En 1992, Wolfgang Fischer rencontre Hélène Beltracchi. Ils se marient en 1993 et Wolfgang prend le patronyme de sa femme.Wolfgang et ses reproductions de peinturesWolfgang commence très jeune à reproduire des artistes. Il débute en intégrant aux paysages de peintres du dimanche des silhouettes façon Bruegel, pour leur donner de la valeur. A 14 ans, il se lance le défi de reproduire La mère et l’enfant de Pablo Picasso et impressionne son père. Le premier tableau qu’il peint intégralement et met en vente est une oeuvre originale d’Hendrick Avercamp. Cette reproduction lui rapporte 2500€.Ecoutez la suite... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

stern Crime - Spurensuche
Der Kunst-Krimi

stern Crime - Spurensuche

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2019 43:25


Für die vierte Folge der zweiten Staffel sprach Crime-Reporterin Silke Müller mit René Allonge, dem Leiter der Abteilung für Kunstdelikte beim Landeskriminalamt Berlin über den Jahrhundertfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi. Als Allonge und sein Team den Kunstbetrüger 2010 verhafteten, hatte er bereits geschätzte 200 Gemälde verkauft und Sammler um mehrere Millionen Euro betrogen. Noch heute sollen Beltracchi-Fälschungen unerkannt in Museen hängen. Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.

Persönlich
Der Kunstfälscher Beltracchi und seine Komplizin

Persönlich

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2019 50:41


Wolfgang Beltracchi gilt als einer der grössten Kunstfälscher der Geschichte. 40 Jahre lang imitierte er grosse Meister und gab die Bilder als Originale aus. Seine Ehefrau Helene schleuste sie geschickt in den Kunstmarkt ein.  Geboren ist Wolfgang Beltracchi 1951 in Westfalen in Deutschland. Sein Vater war Kirchenmaler und Restaurator und führte Klein-Wolfgang ins Kunsthandwerk ein. Schon mit 14 Jahren malte er seinen ersten Picasso. Eigentlich wollte Wolfgang Beltracchi Rockstar werden, er durchlebte wilde Jugendjahre, zog als Hippie durch Europa und liess nach dem Motto Sex, Drugs und Rock'n'Roll nichts aus. Nach und nach begann Wolfgang Beltracchi, Bilder in der Handschrift grosser Meister zu malen und sie für viel Geld in den Kunsthandel einzuschleusen. Grosse Liebe Helene 1992 lernte er seine grosse Liebe und spätere Komplizin kennen: Helene Beltracchi. «Er erzählte mir nach drei Tagen, welchen Beruf er ausübt», lacht sie, «ich war natürlich geschockt, fand es aber irgendwie auch witzig.» Ab sofort war sie zuständig für den Verkauf der Bilder und die Kontakte zu Galerien und Auktionshäusern. Der Schwindel flog 2010 auf, beide landeten in Deutschland im Gefängnis und mussten Millionen zurückzahlen. Leben am Vierwaldstättersee Seit ihrem Gefängnisaufenthalt leben Beltracchis im luzernischen Meggen am Vierwaldstättersee. Sie haben zwei erwachsene Kinder. Die Talk-Sendung «Persönlich» von Radio SRF 1 kommt am Sonntag, 13. Oktober 2019 live aus dem Theater am Hechtplatz in Zürich. Die Veranstaltung ist ausgebucht.

Art Pros Podcast
Episode 27: The Art Of Forgery

Art Pros Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019 66:22


This week the Art CONS Podcast, we talk about plagiarism, theft, and the controversial story surrounding a very infamous art forger named Wolfgang Beltracchi. Beltracchi made millions of dollars by forging the style of famous dead painters and creating original compositions of "undiscovered" paintings and drawings. In fact, he did it so well that he was able to get certificates of authenticity to sell them, fooling art appraisers, and close family members. [More on www.artprospodcast.com • follow us on IG @paid.artists • donate to our patreon at patreon.com/artprospodcast • email us artprospodcast@gmail.com]

CULTE Le Podcast
Episode 5 - Wolfgang Beltracchi

CULTE Le Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2019 8:37


Silas Kreienbühl
Dr. René Stettler & Silas Kreienbühl. Ein Spaziergangsgespräch. 20.3.19 Neubad, Luzern (CH)

Silas Kreienbühl

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2019 65:29


Der Künstler Silas Kreienbühl redet mit dem Kulturwissenschaftler René Stettler. Kreienbühl spaziert zu zweit, gibt der Begleiterin, dem Begleiter eine Kamera in die Hand und lässt sie ihre Sicht auf die Welt festhalten. Im Neubad sind nun die Bilder zu sehen, die dabei entstanden sind: Fotografien von Menschen ganz unterschiedlicher sozialer, politischer und beruflicher Prägung. Unter anderem von Wolfgang Beltracchi, Moritz Leuenberger, Pedro Lenz, Felix Müri, Beat Züsli, Niklaus Troxler, Niccel Steinberger, Petra Gössi oder Ramona Dempsey. «Spazieren zu zweit» ist aber nur ein Aspekt von Kreienbühls Kunstforschung. Zusätzlich entstehen auch seine persönlichen Fotografien, Malereien, Texte sowie noch andere Arbeiten. René Stettler hat vor einem Vierteljahrhundert in Luzern eine kulturelle und wissenschaftliche Plattform – die Schweizer Biennale, zu Wissenschaft, Technik + Ästhetik – gegründet, auf der inzwischen über 150 namhafte Wissenschaftler, Gelehrte und Künstler aus der ganzen Welt aufgetreten sind. Seit 20 Jahren lehrt Stettler auch Medientheorie und -philosophie und ist Dozent für chinesische Gegenwartskunst an der Hochschule Luzern, Design & Kunst. 

 Für Kreienbühl ist der Akt des «Spazierens» auch eine Auseinandersetzung mit sich selbst und das Erkunden der Umwelt in der wir leben. Doch wo liegen die Grenzen zwischen innen (unserem Bewusstsein) und aussen (der Welt, die wir wahrnehmen)? Worin besteht die wechselseitige Beziehung zwischen Bewusstsein und Welt? Wer sind wir, wenn wir in der Welt als «Spazierende» unterwegs sind? Das Gespräch zwischen Künstler und Kulturwissenschaftler ist ein Versuch an der Nahtstelle von unterschiedlichen Wissensformen (Naturwissenschaft, Neurowissenschaft, Kunst, Buddhismus etc.) neue Wege des Erkennens des Selbsts und der Welt zu erkunden sowie unkonventionelle Fragen zu unserem phänomenalen Bewusstsein und unserem Wissen aufzuwerfen. René Stettler https://www.rene-stettler.ch/ Like and subscribe HOME (https://www.silaskreienbuehl.ch) (https://www.kklb.ch) Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/silaskreienbuehl) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/silas.kreienbuehl) Vimeo (https://www.vimeo.com/silaskreienbuehl) LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/silas-kreienb%C3%BChl-2103a4161/)

brettagoge (Brettalogie)
[#096] Kunst braucht Hirn - Unterricht

brettagoge (Brettalogie)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2019 121:38


Guten Morgen liebe Klasse!Hefte raus, heute ist mal wieder Unterricht. Ganz recht! Herr Noe beehrt den Podcast und zusammen mit Herrn Wagner wird gepaukt, gepaukt und gepaukt.Wie immer wird das Quiz der letzten Unterrichtsstunde aufgelöst. Der Gewinner diesmal iiiissssst: ... Ja, wer denn eigentlich?! Das Spiel, das es zu erraten galt, war jedenfalls Kakerlacula. Es geht auch im Hauptteil gruselig weiter. In Raxxon versuchen die Spieler, eine Zombieepidemie einzudämmen. Ob das Spiel genauso spannend ist, wie es das Thema vermuten lässt, wird selbstredend genauso geklärt, wie auch die Frage, was ein Zombie genau ist, warum er immer so schlurft und weshalb das alles so metaphorisch ist. Jaja, Dracula und Zombies - gibt es alles nicht - wissen wir! Ebenso wenig aber gibt es auch einige Bilder auf dem Kunstmarkt. Also es gibt sie schon, man kann sie ja kaufen, aber sie sind eben auch nicht echt. Was am Spieltisch in Form des Spiels Belratti nicht nur falschen Spaß verspricht, sorgt in der Realität oft für einigen gebremsten Spaß bei Händlern und Sammlern, wie Herrn Wagner nach einem kurzen generellen Rundumschlag zum Thema am Beispiel des namensgebenden Wolfgang Beltracchi nachzeichnet.Am Ende der Folge gibt es wieder mal ein Interview - diesmal mit Spieleautor Michael Loth, der auch Mitinhaber des Mogel Verlages ist und unter anderem erzählt, wie der Familienbetrieb Mogel so funktioniert und wie es zu Belratti kam. Vielen herzlichen Dank für die genommene Zeit. Viel Spaß mit Episode 096 wünschen -die brettagogen- Intro/Outro Musik: Bubens van Lyk

Radio 1 - Doppelpunkt
Wolfgang Beltracchi, Trauffer,

Radio 1 - Doppelpunkt

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2019 55:51


Best of Doppelpunkt mit Wolfgang Beltracchi, Marc A. Trauffer und Armin Trösch. Radio 1-Chef Roger Schawinski präsentiert die besten Ausschnitte aus den Doppel-Punkt-Sendungen des vergangenen Jahrs. Diesen Sonntag mit Meisterfälscher Wolfgang Beltracchi, mit dem als Alpentainer bekannten Musiker Marc A. Trauffer und Musik- und Theaterantiquar Armin Trösch.

Radio 1 - Doppelpunkt
Wolfgang Beltracchi

Radio 1 - Doppelpunkt

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2018 53:27


Zu Gast bei Roger Schawinski ist Wolfgang Beltracchi. Er ist der wohl bekannteste Kunstfälscher der Welt. Wolfgang Beltracchi. Im Jahr 2011 wurde er in einem der grössten Kunstfälscherprozesse wegen gewerbsmässigem Betrug zu einer Haftstrafe von sechs Jahren verurteilt. Nach seiner Freilassung zog der Deutsche in die Schweiz und malt weiter. Bei Radio 1-Chef Roger Schawinski spricht Beltracchi über sein spannendes Leben als Kunstfälscher.

The Art Law Podcast
What Can Science Tell Us About Art?

The Art Law Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2018 54:15


On this month’s podcast we discuss the role of science in fine art.  Specifically, what can science tell us about a work of art’s origin and authenticity?  Can science help us discover fakes and forgeries undetected by traditional connoisseur style observation?  We are joined by the famous art scientist Jamie Martin to discuss these issues, recount famous forgery scandals, and delve into his techniques and practices. Resources: http://orionanalytical.com/media/ http://www.sothebys.com/en/news-video/blogs/all-blogs/sotheby-s-at-large/2016/12/scientist-art-world-james-martin.html https://www.wired.com/2016/12/how-to-detect-art-forgery/ https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-the-8-most-prolific-forgers-in-art-history-that-we-know-of https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2012/10/wolfgang-beltracchi-helene-art-scam https://news.artnet.com/market/forger-wolfgang-beltracchi-exhibition-296551 http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/19/arts/design/ken-perenyi-art-forger-now-sells-his-work-as-copies.html Episode Transcription:  Steve Schindler:  Hi. I'm Steve Schindler. Katie Wilson-Milne:  I'm Katie Wilson-Milne. Steve Schindler:  Welcome to the Art Law podcast, a monthly podcast exploring the places where art intersects with and interferes with the law. Katie Wilson-Milne:  And vice versa.  The Art Law Podcast is sponsored by the Law firm of Schindler Cohen & Hochman LLP, a premier litigation and art law boutique in New York City. On this episode of the podcast we will be discussing the role of science and fine art. Specifically what can science tell us about the work of arts origin and authenticity? Can science help us discover fakes and forgeries that would be undetected by more traditional connoisseur-style observation? Steve Schindler:  We’re here today with Jamie Martin, Senior Vice President and Director of Scientific Research at Sotheby’s auction house, a title that really doesn’t do Jamie justice. Jamie is an artist, art conservator and forensic scientist. In 2000, he founded a company called Orion Analytical that became the preeminent materials analysis and consulting firm, specializing in the scientific analysis of art and cultural property. Working at the intersection of art and science, Jamie has revealed multimillion dollar forgeries in the art market, taught at The Getty Conservation Institute and the FBI, and conducted more than 1800 scientific investigations for museums, galleries, insurance companies, and private collectors around the world. Katie and I have both worked closely with Jamie and it is a genuine pleasure to welcome him to the podcast. Welcome to the podcast Jamie. Jamie Martin:  Hi! Katie Wilson-Milne:  Yes, thanks for being here Jamie. So what can science tell us about art? Jamie Martin:  The way I like to phrase it is, is that science helps art tell its own story. Science can reveal the structure of the work, its composition and its condition. Steve Schindler:  How Jamie would you say that science intersects with questions about authenticity and fraud? Jamie Martin:  Well, in about 2009, the College Art Association codified guidelines and standards for authentications and attributions. Steve Schindler:  What is the College Art Association? Jamie Martin:  I'm not a member, but my understanding is that it’s a national association of art historians principally in colleges but also working privately or working in museums as well. Steve Schindler:  Okay, so they came out with some guidelines? Jamie Martin:  They did and in codifying guidelines they identified three essential elements involved in the authentication attribution process. The first oldest most important and never to be replaced is stylistic connoisseurship, which is examination with learned eye of the scholar. The scholar is the person or the entity that attributes and actually authenticates work of art. The second essential element is the provenance of the work or the documented history from the time it left the artist studio to present day. And usually that’s fractured or incomplete in some way. The third essential element which has been part of these kinds of studies for at least a 100 years, but was codified in this document, is scientific or technical examination. And the role of science and technical examination in authentication and attribution studies is twofold, one is to test the claimed attributes of the attribution of the work and also test the claimed attributes of the provenance. In other words to see if the physical substance of the work is consistent with its attribution and provenance, the other principle aim of science and technology is to provide investigative leads, so to better understand the object – essentially to let the object tell its story about where it was, when it was, what it was. And those leads can help art historians and researchers better place the object in time, in some cases in a particular artist studio. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So what is the analysis of the work actually look like in terms of what you’re doing, maybe walk us through a typical examination of a painting? Jamie Martin:  So generally speaking from start to finish, every exam would start with visual inspection of the work in bright white light, the same way that a connoisseur would examine the work.  They want to see the composition, or the design. They want to see the color, the opacity, essentially the facture of the work, the way the work is constructed. They’ll then move the light to the side, which is called raking light, and that reveals information about the texture of the work. And often identifies the presence of restoration or alteration, because in an authentication study a scientist doesn’t want to inadvertently identify restoration as original, find a problem and reach a wrong conclusion.  Scientist and conservators then use ultraviolet light which, when I was a teenager these were lights on the ceiling of my room that illuminated Led Zeppelin posters. Steve Schindler:  I had the same posters and the same lights – by the way. Jamie Martin:  Alright. So we use the same lights now to illuminate works of art and materials have inherent fluorescence which allows us to see the distribution of different materials and often the distribution of restoration and alteration. We then use infrared light. We can't see infrared light as humans, but we can use cameras to detect it and record it and create an image. And with that we can often better see restoration, but more importantly we can see through the paint. We can see through some materials to see what lays beneath, so artist underdrawings. We can see inscriptions that have been obliterated or erased. And all of those are noninvasive techniques that basically tell us about the object as a whole. We then take the object and we put the object under what’s called a stereo binocular microscope – a microscope that gives us a three dimensional color image of the work and magnifications up to about 90 times – and with this we can look at the fine detail of the work.  We can begin to understand its structure and its condition.  We create a mental inventory of the number of different materials. We account for the presence of restoration. And this process helps guide the subsequent analyses that we do. The best most reliable way to analyze the work from a statistical point of view is to take the work of art, put it in a blender, destroy it, mix it up into a powder, take a pinch and analyze it.  We obviously can't do that. So we have to select visually representative areas of our work and conduct our analyses on that. We have a range of noninvasive techniques that we can use. Not taking a physical sample, actually not touching the work of art, we can identify the elemental composition, so the elements like sodium or lead or mercury, we can identify where they are in the work. In the case of Remington sculpture, that can help determine whether the work was cast before Remington died or if it was cast after the artist died. And if after, whether it was authorized or unauthorized.  If it’s a work of art like a painting or a painting on paper or a drawing, we can map the elemental composition of the work. So we can look for elements that stand out. Given the attribution, let’s say an artist who’s painting in 1800, if we find concentrations of elements associated with original material that is part of the object and those elements only became part of paints after 1800, then that raises red flags about the work. And then we can use other techniques to identify what those materials are. In variably however in most cases we need to take a sample and we need to analyze the sample so that we understand the full composition of the material to give you an idea of the kind of sample, the sample size that we need are typical sample sizes range from about 1/1000th of a millimeter to about 40/1000ths of a millimeter, which is about the width of a human hair. Katie Wilson-Milne:  How do you even collect a sample that small? Jamie Martin:  It’s good question. You collect it using the same microscope that you use to find the sample location, so using a microscope that’s analogous to a surgical microscope, same kind of microscope a neurosurgeon would use. And we actually use neurosurgeon tools. I use a scalpel. And I’ll use the scalpel to remove such a tiny piece of material, I can only see it with a microscope, but that one little tiny microscopic specimen can be used for one or two or five or ten separate analyses depending on what the questions are. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Jamie I think one question we shouldn’t let go by for too long is how are you qualified to do this work, right. I mean the way you described the analysis of the art, presupposes a certain amount of knowledge when you look at the piece under the light initially and you’re sort of doing the visual analysis. How do you know how to do that? Jamie Martin:  Well, conservation scientists have different backgrounds, some are PhDs who have advanced degrees in chemistry or engineering. Others come from the conservation ranks. And that’s the route I took. My background is a little different. It’s a bit unique in the field, when I was 13 my father gave me a microscope, a chemistry set and sent me to art school. And so from a very young age I was taught how to mix different powdered pigments together to make paint. And how to stretch canvases much the same way it was done in old master days in workshops. And at the same time I was blowing little things up in my bedroom with my chemistry set and beginning to explore the world with a microscope which sits on the desk I have now. After high school I attended a traditional art school in Baltimore. And we were taught to emulate the techniques of the old masters and one thing I became very proficient at doing was doing copies in museums where I could create works in some cases that were indistinguishable from the originals. I did a copy of William Merritt Chase of the Baltimore Museum of Art. And as I was walking out with it one day, the director of the museum asked me if I was taking it back to storage.  And I sort of laughed. Steve Schindler:  You were in training either to be a conservation professional or a forger – Jamie Martin:  Well that – that’s very interesting when I applied to the conservation graduate programs which included Winterthur, the admissions committee raised questions and flagged me, because my art portfolio was so strong and my ability to copy was so good. They were concerned if they trained me as a conservator and a scientist that I would be a master forger. It turns out and I didn’t know at that time, I'm a bit of a master detective at catching forgers.  So I got a graduate degree in art conservation at the University of Delaware, then I went on to postgraduate work at University of Cambridge. Then I set about creating the first two fee-for-service conservation analytical labs in the United States, one in a museum and one privately and they were both setup to provide basic conservation science services to conservators and museums that didn’t have scientists. So what equips me to take samples and what equips me to interpret the data and reach reliable, accurate conclusions is having taken about 15,000 samples and having conducted about 13,000 FTI or analyses.  It’s just a lot of experience, the good luck, good fortune of working with really good scientists over the years who were able to teach me the tools of the trade. And then being surrounded by excellent people in museums and the conservation field and interestingly also in the art law field. Steve Schindler:  So let’s talk about your detective skills, because one of the ways that we met was in connection with a case involving fakes and forgeries. How prevalent are fakes and forgeries in your view in the art market? Jamie Martin:  Well, we really don’t know.  We read in newspapers and magazines from time to time that it’s been estimated that 50% of works are fake or 80% of works are fake, but if you dig a bit deeper into those articles it’s often someone trying to make the claim to attract business and create a fear that everything is sold in the market place is potentially a fake. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Yeah, I feel like I've read articles, “half the works on every museum all are fake, you just don’t know it.” Jamie Martin:  Yeah, we just don’t know, there’s been no study done. There’s no data to look to. What we know publically is probably a small fraction of the art forgery case isn't fakes that are in circulation or from cases like the Beltracchi case or the Knoedler case or the Rudy Kurniawan case that dealt with wine, there are lot of investigations being done behind the scenes by law enforcement that we’ll probably never know about. And a lot of investigations I did were done under confidentiality agreements that I can't discuss. Someday I hope the FBI will get on to it, burst the forgery ring and make people whole. I would say that forgeries can be a significant problem, depending on what is being forged or faked and where it’s being sold. So generally a ring of forgers has a target market in sight. They more or less know the market that they want to create the works for and sell the works for. There is some evidence to suggest that forgeries pertaining to a particular artist spike up after a big exhibition on the artist or after publication of the catalogue raisonné, because there’s a lot of technical information and a lot of visual information that a forger can take and create a pastiche – using some of the materials that are disclosed in the publication. It’s one of the reasons why scientists like I, scientist in museums often don’t disclose everything we find, but withhold some important information, so that we don’t give away all the secrets of detection or we don’t disclose publically all of the stupid mistakes that forgers are making. We like them to continue to make those stupid mistakes. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So can you tell our audience briefly about the Beltracchi case? Jamie Martin:  Yeah, so Wolfgang Beltracchi and his wife devised a really sinister scheme to create a large group of fake works that reportedly created in Europe, say between 1910 and 1930. And they would use publications that sided exhibitions of works by known artist that didn’t give illustrations, didn’t give sizes.  They gave the artist name, the date, and the title of the work. And that was the basis of the provenance for the work. They could create a work, point back to that publication and say, “Oh, here’s the work.” What was particularly clever was that they created the false provenance of the so-called “Jagers collection” and Jagers happened to be Beltracchi’s wife Helene’s maiden name. And what Beltracchi did was to create framed posters of his fakes, he put them in a room. He had period furniture. Katie Wilson-Milne:  I love this part. Jamie Martin:  And his wife dressed up as her grandmother and posed with the works.  Beltracchi used an old box style camera that would make the image a little blurry. He printed the photographs on deckled paper, which would have been period, photocopied them. And then you can imagine when Helene would take the painting and present the perspective owner with the photograph of the painting photographed with her grandmother, people would say, “Oh my God, the family resemblance!  You look so much like your grandmother.” And as this often the case with fakes and forgeries it doesn’t take much to nudge someone to the point of accepting what is false as true. They didn’t look deeper.  That was enough for them to believe the story that Beltracchi assembled. Steve Schindler:  It always seems in these cases that the purchasers and fakes so much want to believe.  Whether it’s in the Rudy Kurniawan case that you just eluded to before – passionate collectors of wine want to believe that they’re getting these rare vintages so much that they overlook obvious clues.  In other cases, they buy works where the signatures are misspelled, as we’ll get to, so part of it just seems to be tremendous excitement and passion on the part of the purchasers. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Well and there’s no incentive for anyone in that chain to want something to be fake, right? The buyer wants it to be worth what they paid for it. They want it to be by the artists they think it’s from. So who in that chain wants to disrupt that? Jamie Martin:  Well, in a very clever way of introducing the fakes is to introduce the fakes that art fairs or dealers where there’s a real time pressure to purchase.  So for example in an art fair, a fake might be exhibited, and you might get two people in the span of two or three days looking at the work, basically competing for who’s going to purchase the work. There really isn't the time to step back to examine the claimed attributes, so the work is attributed to artist X in year Y. I think I’d like to step back, look at some books published on the artist perhaps the catalogue raisonné and see if this work really fits. And then I want to look at the provenance. And I want to find out if there was actually a Jagers collection. And if not, those are going to raise red flags for me. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So how did he get caught? Jamie Martin:  Beltracchi got caught, because the Doerner Institute in Munich, Germany was given a painting by the police to examine and they found two things working with an art historian who probably was the first person to break the case. He noted that the fake labels that were applied to the back of many of the works were of a gallery that didn’t exist at the time the works were purportedly dated. So the gallery label dates were mismatched. The Doerner Institute then examined the painting and they found that the painting contained historically inaccurate materials. So pigments that weren’t introduced and used at paints at the age of that particular work of art.  And that’s enough to conclude that the work couldn’t have been – could not have been constructed at that time, and that raised huge flags. At that point I understand that police began to assemble lists of works that were likely Beltracchi fakes. I became involved through looking at a number of works for private collectors and auction houses and was commissioned actually by 60 Minutes to examine a fake Beltracchi work in the style of Ernst, so I could explain to Bob Simon how Beltracchi created the work, but more importantly how Beltracchi got caught. Now Beltracchi was very careful about his materials. He would purchase old canvases that would have been used in the same period, so if you tried to date the canvas, it would be appropriate. And he tried to select paints that contained pigments that would be used at that time. So he would go to the store and he would look for Winsor and Newton paint and he would turn it around and look at the label. And it would say Zinc White. And that was the limit of Beltracchi’s knowledge of paint manufacturers. Now because paint manufacturer from time to time hired me to reverse engineer their competitors’ products to tell them what they were using to make paint, I was aware that manufactures often topped off or added materials to paints. And in this case the manufacturer added a little bit of a very opaque pigment called Titanium White to the Zinc White. And they used modern synthetic organic pigment called Phthalocyanine Blue that they used to top off or make the blue paint that Beltracchi used more intense. And those two materials were very easy to detect. And they proved that that those works were not authentic. Beltracchi himself I think was quoted saying, “Ah yeah, the Titanium White.” Katie Wilson-Milne:  We should probably interject, Steve, to explain the legal background that it’s obviously not illegal to copy something that’s in the public domain, if you say it’s a copy and you tell people that you painted it and it’s not by the original artist. What is illegal is fraud and pretending that a work authored by you is by another person and leading a buyer, inducing a buyer to buy that work based on that fact. Jamie Martin:  Correct. Steve Schindler:  And so one question, Jamie, is – you mentioned before that you, one of the things you search for are these anomalies and you’re able to determine whether a work could have been created at the time that it was purported to be created, but do you actually authenticate works? Jamie Martin:  No, rarely will scientific or technical examination unilaterally attribute or authenticate a work. And -- Steve Schindler:  Why is that? Jamie Martin:  Well, because there isn't a chemical or material fingerprint that would allow you to individualize a work to one and only one artist at a particular time. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So science can't tell you something is authentic, but it can tell you something is fake? Jamie Martin:  It can tell you that something is fake.  From time to time, you can form a conclusive, reliable, durable opinion that a work is fake based on science. It can also buttress an attribution more provenance, but it will never substitute for the absence of or a defect in provenance or stylistic connoisseurship. Steve Schindler:  Do you think in the area of stylistic connoisseurship which, is often criticized as being sometimes objective, insular, elitist, whatever you will – whether there is a place for science or an opportunity for science to replace the work of the connoisseur and I'm thinking particularly about advances in artificial intelligence the type of technology that makes an Apple iPhone work, the facial recognition. Do you sense that there is a place for that kind of technology in making attributions or authentications? Jamie Martin:  For probably about 10 years there’s been an emphasis in the computer science and physics disciplines to use image processing, computer analysis and things like fractal analysis, sparse coding analysis to essentially replace what – in some cases is viewed as the subjective eye of the kind of connoisseur – with the more “objective eye” of the computer looking at a photograph. There’s been some interesting and promising research done which I believe can enhance the work of authenticating or dating works, that is, clearly showing that something is inconsistent with the work of an artist. Or in the case of Dürer drawings – comparing Dürer drawings to see how closely the strokes and the pressure applied to the implement and the basic composition is.  However I haven’t seen any technology at this point that is able to accurately attribute works absent the human input of a scholar, of a conservator, of a scientist. I think it’ll probably happen in my life time.  It’ll hopefully happen before I retire. Katie Wilson-Milne:  You describe a very complimentary process, but there has been some suggestion that there’s a tension between a traditional connoisseur – a PhD in art history, works at a museum – and scientific analysis that, I don’t know, there’s a perceived fear that science is replacing that scholarly expertise.  Is that something you come in contact with or you also perceive? Jamie Martin:  Well, so there are a universe of conversations probably that are going on and they’re informed by different experiences and backgrounds and opportunities. I haven’t experienced that tension myself, before or since coming the Sotheby's, but I come from an old school conservation science background where I'm one of three players. I view it as a three legged stool. And that first most important leg of this stool is the curator, is the catalogue raisonné author, is the independent expert. The second leg is the provenance leg, and I'm the third leg.  My job is there just to steady the stool. Steve Schindler:  You’re telling yourself short Jamie but – Katie Wilson-Milne:  You’re creating a stool, but yes we take your points. Steve Schindler:  Yeah, one of the things that also dawns on me because we – we have experienced the problem in what we do of authenticators being reluctant now to authenticate work for reasons that we’re all well aware of: they get sued. They get sued by people who view themselves as possessing authentic works and they disagree with authenticators’ opinions. Katie Wilson-Milne:  What would be the basis for a lawsuit on those grounds? Steve Schindler:  Well, we’ve seen a lot of different theories, most of which had been rejected. It could be a theory of negligence, there have been reasons as wild as antitrust theories that have been set out. And the interesting thing is most of the lawsuits against authenticators end up either being settled or dismissed favorably towards the authenticators, but they have to spend an awful lot of money defending themselves, which is why they – in many cases, foundations and authenticating boards have stopped authenticating, and experts who are not paid a great deal of money typically to give opinions and find themselves tremendously at risk and we’ve been working in the art law community trying to remedy that legislatively at least in New York, but it does dawn on me that machines can't get sued probably, not yet. And so if there was a room for science to provide a clear or more objective authentication, it might alleviate some of the burdens on the whole process, I don’t know if you have any reactions to that. Jamie Martin:  I do I guess, I think the Knoedler case was probably a textbook case of where an expert in good faith working first for the Knoedler gallery and its director in providing reliable, accurate opinions on the attribution of authenticity of works and then subsequently working for a number of people who purchased works from the gallery – again in good faith providing accurate, reliable durable data and conclusions got caught up not in a lawsuit but in a flurry of subpoenas. Katie Wilson-Milne:  This expert is you, Jamie. Jamie Martin:  This expert is me. And I had never heard of a third-party expert having to retain legal council to produce documents and to represent the expert in court to answer allegations of obstruction of proper discovery and handling of evidence before. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So even the scientist can get caught up in these legal issues. Jamie Martin:  And it had a chilling effect during the Knoedler case.  Before Knoedler, I could pick up the phone and call someone of the National Gallery and ask if I could come in and look through the research files on a particular case. Once the subpoenas went out and Knoedler, which included the director of the National Gallery – I would call the National Gallery and I was told by my colleagues, “We’ve been instructed by the legal counsel not to answer the phone when you call.”  Now since Knoedler, that’s gotten better but the chilling effect in Knoedler was that you could be caught up in this and your life could be turned inside out. And other scientists who you know could say horrible things about you that had no basis in fact. And that was just the way the system worked. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Let’s talk about the famous Knoedler case which, you were involved in it, we were also peripherally. Steve Schindler:  Full disclosure – I guess at this point, since Jamie brought it up. We were representing Jamie and that’s how we were – fortunate enough to meet him and to be sitting here with him today. Katie Wilson-Milne:  There were many, many lawyers involved in the Knoedler case. All right, so the Knoedler Gallery was the oldest and one of the most respected art galleries in New York City and the United States. It had been a business for 165 years in a beautiful town house on the Upper East Side. And in 2011, at the end of 2011, it abruptly shut down declaring bankruptcy. In the background of this declaration of bankruptcy in going out of business was a brewing scandal over the sale of about 40 works of art that Knoedler sold and had alleged work created by who’s who of modern masters: Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, Motherwell, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko, William De Kooning, and others. There was one other dealer, Julian Weissman, who had sold 23 similar works of art. But we’ll focus on the Knoedler aspect of this. These works were said to have brought in up to $80 million in profits for the dealers and following the galleries, closing this started to come out. There were rapid succession of lawsuits that were filed by collectors, alleging that these works were fake. And not to give away the end of the story they were fake. The provenance of these works had been sketchy. The works had all been brought to Knoedler by a Long Island art dealer, her name was Glafira Rosales who claimed to have obtained these works – never before seen on the market – from the children of a European Jewish collector, who wanted to remain anonymous for a variety of tantalizing reasons which people can look up in the newspaper. This collector had supposedly bought these works through a dealer and friend of these artist directly from the artist studios in the ‘60s – the ‘50s and the ‘60s. So that’s why the works had never been seen on the market before. The story changed slightly over time and no documentation was ever provided by Rosales substantially in these origins, but that was the story that gallery retold to the buyers of these pieces and then later when they were brought in to these lawsuits. So Knoedler and its President, a woman named Ann Freedman did maintain that the works were genuine through the beginning of many of these lawsuits, notwithstanding the fact that Jamie demonstrated that many of them, conclusively were not genuine. But in August 2013 in a parallel criminal investigation at the U.S. attorney’s office was involved in, Rosales was indicted and the FBI raided a house in Queens, where a very talented Chinese immigrant artist had been creating all these works. He had been creating these De Kooning’s and Motherwell’s and Rothko’s and the evidence was right there. Steve Schindler:  He had an amazing repertoire. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Yeah it was incredible and it – and when law enforcement got at the house the doors were open, someone told me that or I read somewhere that a cereal bowl was half full and this artist had just fled.  Nothing had been really taken or disturbed, so it was pretty conclusive, after this Knoedler and Ann Freedman changed their story. They admitted the works were fake. And then they argued that they had also been defrauded, that they had no way of knowing that the words would have been fake. So there were series of civil litigations, most of them have settled, no criminal charges were ever brought against the gallery or Ann Freedman.  Glafira Rosales was indicted. She pled guilty. Steve Schindler:  She pled guilty and was given a very lenient sentence, which was house arrest, I believe, and some restitution. Katie Wilson-Milne: Yeah and the Chinese artist is no longer in the United States and that’s all we know. So Jamie tell us how you were involved in the Knoedler case? Jamie Martin:  Well, I was first hired by Ann Freedman and Knoedler Gallery to look at two purported Robert Motherwell paintings. And what became clear early on is that the works were created over old paintings, part of which had been removed with an electric orbital sander which was not a practice that Motherwell used. So that was one clue.  Another clue was that the works had a series of white grounds that were materials that Motherwell was not using in the 1950s. One painting was signed and dated ‘53, the other was dated ‘56 is I recall. So I was finding materials that Motherwell wasn’t using till late ‘60s and I was finding pigments that weren’t introduced in paints until the ‘70s. So that work concluded and some years later I was asked to examine Jackson Pollock painting that was purchased for around $17 million. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Also by the gallery or as – Jamie Martin:  Yeah, it was sold by the gallery as a work by Jackson Pollock and within just a few days I was finding acrylic paint and I was finding pigments that weren’t being used and artist paints until the 1980s and 1990s. I issued a report, the attorney gave it to Knoedler, and Knoedler closed the next day. Katie Wilson-Milne:  And so you were hired by a collector, a buyer to do that analysis? Jamie Martin:  Yeah. I then became involved in a series of other works including a purported Mark Rothko painting and that painting was a fake based on a number of features, the principle one being that the Chinese forger used a white ground underneath the paint. Mark Rothko never used white grounds in the 1950s. Katie Wilson-Milne:  What are white grounds? Jamie Martin:  A ground would be like a primer, it would be like a base coat that was applied to the canvas. In the 1950s Rothko was using a transparent colored ground and in this case it was an opaque white ground and it was a white ground that you could see at the edges, if you’re new to look for it. So that was a tip off on that work and they were whole selection of other works that I examined. For collectors, also for the U.S. attorney’s office and FBI, and to put it in a nutshell, what I was finding in this group of more than 20 works was a pattern of reuse of old paintings to make new paintings, so that the backs of the paintings looked appropriately old. Katie Wilson-Milne:  This is a common technique right?  Beltracchi was doing this too. Jamie Martin:  Very common technique. Take something that’s old and recycle it and on the front paint something that’s new and make it look old. So that was another thing I was finding – that material was being applied to the front of the works to make it look artificially old. I was also finding co-occurrence of the same material. So many of these works painted by more than five artists over a period that spanned about three decades from the late ‘40s to the early ‘60s contained the same white grounds.  I mean, the same white paints. Katie Wilson-Milne:  By different artists. Steve Schindler:  So this was a case where you were fortunate to be able to have tested a number of works by the same forger and even though each work in itself had anomalies that led you to conclude that they were fakes, when you looked at them collectively and it was overwhelming? Jamie Martin:  Exactly, so it was pointing to a common source for all of the paintings and that work continued. I was asked to examine the materials that were ceased from the Chinese forger’s garage which was an interesting process to go through for about six months. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So you were working with the FBI for then. Jamie Martin:  I was.  I was working for the FBI and U.S. attorney’s office on the case as well. So I was able to look at the evidence that they ceased. I was able to examine practice paintings that the forger had created to try to achieve something that look convincing. Katie Wilson-Milne:  You described several anomalies, what was the real smoking gun for you in the Knoedler case? Jamie Martin:  Well, it was a different smoking gun for different works, I mean we – we knew for example that Jackson Pollock died in 1956, so when I'm finding polymers and when I'm finding pigments that were first discovered and patented and first used in paints decades after his death, the only explanation would be time travel – which I'm not a big fan of, so these were obviously fraudulent works. There were also features that contradicted the provenance. One thing that was mentioned in the provenance was that the works were collected over a period of a few years. And they were stored for decades and they were stored in a “hermetically sealed room,” which implies a room that had stable conditions – clean, archival – and many of the works showed paint transfers. They showed accumulation of debris and grime, which was just inconsistent with the story. And that’s one of the features we look at. We not only look at the composition of the work that we’re studying, but we look at the provenance.  We look at the story to see if we see evidence of that or evidence that speaks against it. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Am I remembering correctly that you found a fleece fiber in one of the paintings? Jamie Martin:  Oh, that was a different painting. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Oh okay, I love that. Steve Schindler:  That was a different case, but that’s also one of my favorite stories. Why don’t you share that with us? Jamie Martin:  This is a work that was signed and it was dated 1932 and the work was fairly large. As I recall, it was about 24” by 36” or 32” by 48” and as usual, I went through all the first steps with the work: technical imaging, stereo microscope exam.  I made an inventory of all the materials used to create the work, from the canvas to the primer to all the different paints in the pallet. I analyzed all these materials, and I found that the binders and the pigments were consistent with paints that could have been used in 1932.  And that’s the point at which a lot of scientists or labs would stop and they would write a report. Katie Wilson-Milne:  It looks good. Jamie Martin:  It looks fine, we find nothing to speak against it.  That wasn’t my style, that wasn’t my practice, in part, because it’s informed by a forensic approach. So at that point whenever I engaged in a study and I find a result like that I start over. And I look at every square millimeter of the painting under the stereo microscope and I look for what’s called adventitious material, material that doesn’t belong there. Something that wasn’t part of the paint, something that the artist didn’t intend to include in the painting and I got – I started the bottom and by the time I got to the top two thirds of the painting, I found a fiber in the paint. And I knew it dried in the paint because two ends stuck out and the center was deeply embedded in dried paint. And I took a very small sample of that fiber and analyzed it and I found polypropylene. Polypropylene fiber was first discovered and introduced in 1958. So on the basis of finding one fiber I was able to conclude that there was no way that that work was painted in 1932. I had to spread out, I had to be sure that all the paint was integral across the surface.  Fast forward to 2015, there’s a book published in Paris called The Forger. And it’s a story of a young man who meets a master forger who teaches the young man all the tricks of the trade and the last trick of the trade is: when you’re creating a fake you should always wear a cotton or linen smock, because if one synthetic fiber falls from your clothing and becomes embedded in the painting a good scientist will find it and declare the work a fake. That’s been part of a lecture I've given that was on the Columbia Art Law School website for eight years. And I suspect the person writing the book has internet connection. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Yeah, I do just want to say before we get off Knoedler that it would be hard to overestimate how significant this scandal was for the art world. I mean the art world is a very secretive place deals happen privately, there was not a lot of paperwork and the fact that this scandal was going on and being covered up so well for – well over a decade and that 10s of millions of dollars were being made off the sale of these fake works was really disturbing and even art world people who certainly don’t follow legal claims and cases know about this case, because of the amount of money and the number of forgeries, but also because of the significance of the Knoedler gallery to New York, it really pioneered the art gallery world and it had been at the forefront of the art gallery world in the United States for really long time. So if a buyer went to Knoedler they felt like, “well, if there’s anywhere I can go and I can trust what they’re going to tell me, it’s the Knoedler gallery.” And that really upended people sense of safety I think in the art market. Steve Schindler:  Right, and that was also reinforced by the judge who was hearing these cases in one of his decisions, because the Knoedler gallery and Ann Freedman, one of their defenses was well these sophisticated buyers should have known better, should have done their own due diligence and one of the things that judge said was, “but they were buying these works from Knoedler. They were buying them from one of the most respected galleries in New York.” Katie Wilson-Milne:  Which is the due diligence. Steve Schindler:   Right. Well actually, and one of the things – as long as we were talking about Knoedler still – that always interested me was how Ann Freedman used the fear of authenticators to speak out in her favor and we had represented a couple of these individuals who invariably recalled over to a gallery with a crowd of people shown a fake work and who looked at it and either didn’t say anything or said, “oh that’s nice” or something along those lines. And then afterwards she claimed that they had authenticated these works. And the way that they had authenticated them was to not shout out in a crowded room, “I think this is a fake!” Katie Wilson-Milne:  They stood in front of the work. Steve Schindler:  And they didn’t say anything. So – and of course they would never do that, they were not asked to do that, but even in the most ideal conditions most of these types of experts would have been afraid to speak out like that for fear of being sued and dragged further into this kind of case in the way that Jamie mentioned that he was. Katie Wilson-Milne:  And another significant aspect of Knoedler, and one of the reasons we are so thrilled to be talking to you, Jamie, is that it was one of the first times I think for a lot of people that they understood how science could interact with claims of fakes and forgeries and it was in such a public way that I think the scientific analysis of art hadn’t been widely discussed or understood before. I don’t know if you could talk a little bit about how important scientific analysis was to the outcome of the Knoedler scandal in general but also if you’ve seen the importance of scientific analysis or people’s perceived – how they perceive the importance of scientific analysis increase after Knoedler? Jamie Martin:  Well, I think what you have seen after Knoedler is an increase in the number of investor backed art analysis labs who are offering services to art investors and to some degree of art collectors. So, it was clear from Knoedler, because Knoedler was so widely publicized and covered over such a long period of time. And that the science really did factor quite importantly in the determinations that people recognized that science can be a very effective and necessary tool to assess those claimed attributes. Katie Wilson-Milne:  I will just say that, I perceive the scientific analysis of Knoedler being one of the most important aspects of the proof that was used in those cases and that without the science there were such competing opinions from so called connoisseurs that it was difficult for a non-expert audience like the judge or if there had been a jury to make sense of those kinds of claims, but when there’s the scientific report it sort of – it changed the game in the case. Jamie Martin:  Yeah, I testified in the De Sole case in January 2016, and what I heard after the trial was that the jury really did rely on the scientific information – the presentation of the findings in such a straight forward, visually accessible way – allowed them to understand the weight of the scientific evidence against the works, much in the same way that the testimony about the financial analysis and accounting did to. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Right. The De Sole case, just for our audience, was one of the biggest Knoedler cases that went to trial and then ultimately settled. Steve Schindler:  So, Jamie, if we were assembling the all-time Hall of Fame of forgers, who do you think would be on the top of the list? Who is the best all-time forger in whatever categories you want to rate them? Jamie Martin:  Let’s say, so this would be modern times, this would be since Van Meegeren  because fabulous forgeries were going on in Greek and Roman time and every time since. And Thomas Hoving talks a lot about that in his book. Van Meegeren was an incredible forger who exploited what he knew conservation scientists could and could not do. He knew that we could identify pigments. He knew that we had trouble identifying the binder, the liquid or glue that you mix with pigments to make paint. So he was very careful in his selection of pigments.  In order to make his paintings dry quickly he threw in a synthetic polymer called Bakelite, which, after he created the work, he would put it an oven and heat it for some hours or days and it would be rock hard, as if the paint had aged naturally over three or 400 years. He was later found out.  He was accused of collaborating with the Nazis, and the court instructed him that if he really was a master forger, he should paint a fake Vermeer in the court room. Katie Wilson-Milne:  So he was forging Vermeers? Jamie Martin:  He was forging Vermeers, and he sold a work to Goebbels, and he was in a lot of hot water over that. Steve Schindler:  Wasn’t that also one of his defenses and the collaboration allegation, that, “Well I wasn’t collaborating, I sold him a fake, I sold the Nazis fake art, not real art.” Jamie Martin:  Yeah. It was worth a try, it was a little flimsy. The thing is is that forgers have access to the same technical literature that I do. So conservation scientists like us, we publish the results of our findings, of analyses of documented artists, and if a forger wants to go and read our findings and try to replicate the same materials, theoretically they can do that. And there is a lot of evidence that forgers do look at technical literature. The best forgers I've seen – well, the worst forger I've seen, is a man named William Toy and he was creating fake paintings in Louisiana. His downfall was his love of cats. Katie Wilson-Milne:  That’s a classic downfall! Jamie Martin:  He had 20 or 30 cats in his home, and I did the project for the FBI, and they gave me memory sticks from cameras that showed cats all over his house, including cats on the table where he made his fakes. And in every one of the fake works I examined for the FBI I found cat hair embedded. So he was not a careful forger, but the forgers – Steve Schindler:  There were lot of lessons in that story. Jamie Martin:  Yes. Steve Schindler:  Some involved cats. Jamie Martin:  Yeah, don’t paint around cats and don’t wear polar flees when you’re creating an old master. The better forgers, the forgers that really had the painting skill, the kind of skill that I learned when I was painting, would have to be Beltracchi and then one other forger who’s name I refuse to speak publically, because he is absolutely unrepentant about his work.  But he’s probably the most technically gifted painter-forger I've ever seen. Katie Wilson-Milne:  And never caught. Jamie Martin:  No, caught. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Well, he was caught but not punished. Jamie Martin:  I caught him many times, but he was never indicted and he was never brought to account. Katie Wilson-Milne:  We’ll post links to some of these references. Steve Schindler:  We’ve also seen him bragging about his accomplishments and it’s frustrating. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Yeah he speaks often in public in New York about his great skills. Steve Schindler:  We could do this probably for another hour, but we know you have places to go and every good thing has to come to an end, but thank you so much for joining us on our podcast. Jamie Martin:  You’re welcome, it’s always a pleasure. Katie Wilson-Milne:  Until next time I'm Katie Wilson Milne. Steve Schindler:  And I'm Steve Schindler bringing you the Art Law Podcast. A podcast exploring the places where art intersects with and interferes with the law. Katie Wilson-Milne:  And vice versa. Produced by Jackie Santos

Book Fight
Ep 200: Martin Suter, The Last Weynfeldt

Book Fight

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2017 58:11


This week we're back with another fraud-themed novel, this one from best-selling Swiss author Martin Suter. His fourteenth novel, The Last Weynfeldt, is about art forgery, femme fatales, and what it's like to be wildly rich (spoiler alert: it's mostly pretty good, though sometimes it's kind of sad). Also this week, we talk about the ins and outs of art forgery, including the case of Wolfgang Beltracchi, considered to be one of the most prolific art forgers of all time. You can read more about Beltracchi in this fascinating piece from Vanity Fair.

ArtHouse Radio
On Art Forgery: Wolfgang Beltracchi - Ep. #128

ArtHouse Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2017 22:26


If there's potentially anything crazier than millionaires dropping tons of money on paintings, dropping all those dimes on fake paintings might even be more ridiculous. In this episode we look at Wolfgang Beltracchi, famous German art forger and the basis of the Netflix documentary: "Beltracchi: The Art of Forgery". And don't forget to follow us @arthouse43 everywhere, and PLEASE write a review of for the show on iTunes!

Rodensteins Kunstkabinett
RKK 018- Die größten Kunstfälscher von Michelangelo bis Wolfgang Beltracchi Teil I

Rodensteins Kunstkabinett

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2017 10:54


Wenn man sich mit Kunst beschäftigt stellt sich immer die Frage ob das gekaufte Kunstobjekt auch echt ist, denn der Kunstmarkt ist voll von Kopien. In dieser Folge stellen ich Ihnen einige der best Fälscher der letzten Jahrhunderte vor .

Rodensteins Kunstkabinett
RKK 009/2 Alfred Flechtheim: Machtergreifung, Flucht, Entartete Kunst und Wolfgang Beltracchi

Rodensteins Kunstkabinett

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2016 9:11


Wenn Sie diese Folgen hören sollten Sie auch die erste Episode gehört haben. Nach der Machtergreifung der NSDAP und der Hetze der Nazis verlässt Alfred Flechtheim Deutschland Richtung Schweiz und später nach England, wo er auch wieder als Kunsthändler in einer Galerie arbeitet. Nach seinem Tod wird er in der Ausstellung Entartete Kunst weiter diffamiert, seine Frau Betty kann Deutschland nicht mehr verlassen. In den letzten Jahren wurde sein Namen im Zuge des Kunstfälscherskandals um Wolfgang Beltracchi genannt, da dieser sein Exlibris und die Firmen Etiketten für eine Bilder gefälscht hatte. Blog: http://rodensteinskunstkabinett.podspot.de Louisrodenstein@gmx.de Facebook: Louis Rodestein

Das E&U-Gespräch
Folge 009 – „Die geheimnisvollen Städte“ & Wolfgang Beltracchi

Das E&U-Gespräch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2015


Markus spricht über die Comic-Reihe „Die geheimnisvollen Städte“ von François Schuiten und Benoît Peeters. Benjamin erzählt (ab 31:30) die Geschichte des Kunstfälschers Wolfgang Beltracchi und ärgert sich über dessen Selbstdarstellung in den Medien. Zum Schluss gibt es einen kurzen Nachklapp (1:32:30). Folge 009 – jetzt abspielen

Estamos de fin de semana
Estamos de fin de semana. Cajón de sastre, 15/04/12

Estamos de fin de semana

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2012 13:44


Jorge LLopis nos cuenta la historia del pintor y falsificador Wolfgang Beltracchi.