From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about Shaun Greenhalgh, the
British art forger. For Sean Greenhalgh, the Canadian lacrosse
player, see
Sean
Greenhalgh.
|
Shaun Greenhalgh |
| Born |
Bolton,
London, England |
| Charge(s) |
Conspiracy to Fraud, Money
Laundering |
| Penalty |
4 years 8 months in prison |
| Status |
Incarcerated |
| Occupation |
Unemployed, criminal. |
| Parents |
George Greenhalgh, Olive Greenhalgh |
Shaun Greenhalgh (born 1961) was a British art
forger. Over a seventeen-year period, between 1989 and 2006, he
produced a phenomenal range of forgeries. Teaming up with his
brother and elderly parents, who fronted the sales side of the
operation, he successfully sold his fakes internationally to
museums, auction houses, and private buyers, accruing nearly a
million pounds.
The family have been described by Scotland Yard as "possibly the most
diverse forgery team in the world, ever." However, when they
attempted to sell three Assyrian reliefs using the same
provenance as they had
previously, suspicions were raised. Apprehended, Shaun Greenhalgh
was sentenced to prison for four years and eight months in November
2007.[1
]
The Victoria and Albert Museum
in London is to mount an exhibition of Greenhalgh's "works" from 23
January to 7 February 2010[2].
The Metropolitan Police’s art and antiques unit is building a
replica model of the shed and has labelled Greenhalgh “the most
diverse art forger known in history”. Many of his fakes, including
the Amarna Princess, Risley Park Lanx, Barbara Hepworth Goose and
Thomas Moran paintings will be on display[3].
Family
roles
Shaun Greenhalgh was the artist, but the whole family was
involved in "the garden shed gang". They established an elaborate
cottage industry at his parents' house in
The Crescent, Bromley Cross, Turton, north of Bolton[2].
His parents, George and Olive, approached clients, while his older
brother, George jnr, managed the money.[4] Other
members of the family were invoked to help establish the legitimacy
of the various items. These included Olive's father who owned an
art gallery,[5
] a great-grandfather who it seemed had had the
foresight to buy well at auctions,[1
] and an ancestor who had apparently worked for
the Mayor of Bolton as a cleaner and was gifted a Moran
painting.[6]
Shaun Greenhalgh left school at 16 with no qualifications.[7] A
self-taught artist, undoubtedly influenced by his job as an antiques
dealer, he worked up his forgeries from sketches, photographs, art
books and catalogues.[8] He
attempted a wide range of crafts, from painting in pastels and
watercolours, to sketches, and sculpture, both modern and ancient,
busts and statues, to bas-relief and metalwork. He invested in a
vast range of different materials - silver, stone, marble, rare
stone, replica metal, and glass.[9] He also
did meticulous research to authenticate his items with histories
and provenance (for instance, faking letters from the supposed
artists) in order to demonstrate his ownership. Completed items
were then stored about the house and garden shed. The latter
probably served as a workshop as well.[10]
A quote from an amazed Scotland Yard detective who searched the
house gives a sense of Greenhalgh's industry:
|
“ |
There were blocks of
stone, a furnace for melting silver on top of the fridge,
half-finished and rejected sculptures, a watercolour under the bed,
a cheque for £20,000 dated 1993, and a bust of an American
president in the loft. I’d never seen anything like it.[11] |
” |
A next-door neighbour recalled: "I was finding bits of pottery
and coins around the edges of the garden over 20 years back -
[things like] bits of metal with old kings on."[12
] While this sounds like materials were openly
displayed, it was perhaps not quite that obvious. Angela Thomas, a
curator from the Bolton Museum, actually visited the family at home
prior to the purchase of the Amarna Princess and reported
nothing untoward.[13]
Yet for all his daring – he once boasted that he could knock up
a Moran
watercolour in half an hour and claimed to have completed an Amarna statue in three weeks –
Shaun Greenhalgh needed the help of his parents.[14] At
the trial it was said that his mother, Olive (b.1925), made the
phonecalls "because he was shy and did not like to use the
telephone."[15]
Olive may have been a peripheral figure, but Shaun's father,
George (b.1923), was more involved. He was the frontman who met
face-to-face with potential buyers. "He looks honest, he's elderly
and he shows up in a wheelchair."[16]
George clearly embraced his role. On one occasion, trying to
interest the Bolton
Museum in an Amarna princess, an ancient Egyptian statuette about the size
of a gnome, he told them he was "thinking about using it as a
garden ornament".[17]
The parents were perhaps most important because they helped
establish a logical explanation for why the Greenhalghs had
possession of such items in the first place, namely as family
heirlooms. It even allowed them to offload items when they were
discovered as fakes, such as the Eadred Reliquary, and an L. S. Lowry painting
The Meeting House.[18]
The
"Amarna Princess"
In 1999 the Greenhalghs began their most ambitious project
yet.[17]
They bought an 1892 catalogue which listed the contents of an
auction in Silverton
Park, Devon, the home of the 4th
Earl of
Egremont. Among the items listed were "eight Egyptian
figures."[19] Using
the leeway this vague description allowed, Greenhalgh manufactured
what became called the "Amarna Princess," a 20-inch statue,
apparently made of a "stunning translucent alabaster, it later
emerged within a Panorama documentary that he had bought the tools
to produce this 'masterpiece' from B&Q."[20]
Done in the Egyptian art-style of 1350 BC, the statue represents
one of the daughters of the Pharaoh Akhenaten
and Queen Nefertiti,
mother of Prince
Tutankhamun. At the time, as Greenhalgh had researched, only
two other similar statuettes were known to exist in the world.[21] He
"knocked up" his copy in his shed in three weeks out of calcite,
"using basic DIY tools and making it look old by coating it in a
mixture of tea and clay".[22]
George then approached Bolton Museum in 2002,[23
] claiming the Amarna was from his grandfather’s
"forgotten collection", bought at the Silverton Park auction.[1
] He pretended to be ignorant about its true worth
or value, but was careful to provide the letters Shaun had also
faked, showing how the artifact had been in the family for "a
hundred years".[24]
In 2003, after consulting experts at the British Museum
and Christie's, the
Bolton Museum bought the Amarna Princess for £439,767. It remained
on display until February 2006.[23
]
How they
were caught
Perhaps buoyed up by the fact that they had so successfully
duped the experts the Greenhalghs tried again, using the same
Silverton Park provenance. They produced what were purportedly
three Assyrian reliefs of soldier and horses, from the Palace of Sennacherib in 600
BC.[25]
The British Museum examined them in November 2005, concluded
that they were genuine, and expressed an interest in buying one of
them, which seemed to match a drawing by A. H.
Layard in its collection. However, when two of the reliefs were
submitted to Bonhams auction
house, its antiquities consultant Richard Falkiner spotted "an
obvious fake".[26
] Bonhams consulted with the British Museum about
various suspicious aspects, and the Museum then spotted several
unlikely anomalies. The horses' reins were "not consistent" or
"atypical" with respect to other Assyrian reliefs; and the cuneiform inscription contained a spelling
mistake, an absent diacritical mark, which was considered
extremely unlikely in a piece "destined for the eyes of the king".
These concerns became full blown suspicion when George seemed too
willing to part with the items at a low price. The Museum contacted
the Arts and Antiquities Unit of Scotland Yard, and eighteen months
later the family was arrested.[27]
Monies
involved
Had the Greenhalghs managed to sell all 120 artworks they had
offered it is estimated that they could have earned as much as
£10m.[28] This
would have made the average value of each piece over £83,000,
though in fact monies received varied between £100 (for the Eadred
Reliquary) and £440,000 (for the Amarna Princess). However, this
grand total figure is highly speculative, and a number of factors
underlie its uncertainty.
In the event the Greenhalghs did not manage to offload most of
their works. Many they did sell, like the Eadred Reliquary,
received only minimal amounts. Others, like the Lowry painting
The Meeting House, only gained in value from their
repeated resale, which was not a reflection of the Greenhalghs, and
of course would not have benefited them. As time went on, more
ambitious, expensive pieces of work were produced, some of which
did sell, like the Risley Park Lanx. However, these were subject to
more scrutiny and indeed it was one of these, the Assyrian reliefs,
which led to their being exposed and caught. This suggests the
longevity of their scam was concentrated on the passing off of
lower level items.[29]
Balanced against this must be the success of sales to private
individuals. They are unlikely to have had the same level of
expertise at their disposal as institutions, and are probably less
willing to advertise their losses once the forgeries were detected.
Certainly they have not had the same exposure as the debacle
surrounding the Bolton Museum, for example.[30
] Two individual buyers, "wealthy Americans" have
been noticed, but only after they donated their purchase to the
British Museum.[17]
Another piece sold to an un-named private buyer came to light when
the Art Institute of Chicago
announced that The
Faun, a ceramic sculpture on display since 1997 as the
work of the 19th-century French master Paul Gauguin, was also a forgery by Shaun
Greenhalgh. The museum purchased the sculpture from a private
dealer in London, who had bought it at a Sotheby's auction in
1994.[31]
In addition, the bank records of the Greenhalghs only went back
six years,[32]
so in the final analysis the exact amount of monies involved over
the seventeen year scam has not been determined. What is known is
that "two Halifax accounts... one containing £55,173 and the other
£303,646" were frozen, pending a confiscation hearing in January
2008, and Shaun Greenhalgh was convicted for "conspiracy to conceal
and transfer £410,392."[23
] Estimates of the amount of money the Greenhalghs
actually made vary from £850,000 to £1.5 million.[33]
The impact of their remaining forgeries on the market, however
many there might be, cannot now be considered of immediate
pertinence to the Greenhalghs. These items' worth may fall when
they are exposed as forgeries, yet they may gain some cachet from
their notoriety.[34]
Motivations
The Greenhalgh family did not appear to make much use of the
money they gained. They lived a "far from lavish life" in a
"shabby" council house; among their possessions were "an old TV,
battered sofa, and a Ford Focus", but not a computer. According to
police, the conditions were "relatively frugal" even "abject
poverty".[35]
Despite their apparent disregard for money, the Greenhalghs were
not entirely uninterested in it. When they had nearly half a
million pounds in the bank they continued to draw a welfare
benefit.[20]
And although Olive claimed that she had "not even travelled outside
of Bolton," it is known that George had travelled, duping "all the
great auction houses."[36]
Because they did not show their wealth, explanations other than
desire for money have been proposed. Police suggested that Shaun
Greenhalgh was motivated less by profit than by resentment at his
own lack of recognition as an artist. This "general hatred" became
a need to "shame the art world" and "show them up".[37]
On the other hand, defence lawyer Andrew Nutall characterized
Shaun Greenhalgh as a shy, introverted person, obsessed with "one
outlook and that was his garden shed". The forgeries were an
attempt to "perfect the love he had for such arts". By implication,
the forgeries were a mere unintended, if unfortunate,
consequence.[32]
Known
forgeries
Forty-four forgeries were discussed during the trial, and 120
were known to have been presented to various institutions.[38]
However, given the family's bank records only extended back for a
third of the period they were operating, and Shaun Greenhalgh's
high level of productivity, there are probably many more. On
raiding the Greenhalgh home police discovered many raw materials
and "scores of sculptures, paintings and artefacts, hidden in
wardrobes, under their bed and in the garden shed."[39] In
fact, "there can be little doubt that there are a number of
forgeries still circulating within the art market."[32]
A description of known forgeries includes the following:
- 1989. Eadred Reliquery. A small 10th century silver vessel,
containing a relic of the
true cross of Jerusalem. George Greenhalgh turned up "dripping
wet" at Manchester University,
claiming he'd found it in a river terrace, at Preston. University determined vessel was a
fake; but unsure about the wood. Purchased it for a £100.[40] The
subject of an academic thesis.[41]
- 1990. Samuel
Peploe still life painting, purportedly inherited from Olive's
grandfather, sold for £20,000. However, paint began to flake off
and buyer cancelled cheque. Scotland Yard failed to make an arrest
at the time due to "organisational restraints."[42][43]
- 1992. The Risley Park Lanx A Roman silver plate
bought for £100,000 by private buyers and donated to the British
Museum, who displayed it as genuine replica.[44]
- 1993 and 1994. Thomas Moran sketch and watercolour
acquired by Bolton Museum. "The former was a gift given by the
Greenhalghs; the latter was purchased for £10,000."[45]
- 1995. Anglo-Saxon ring. Tried to sell it through Phillips
Auctioneers; determined by British Museum to be a fake.[44]
- 1995. Twenty-four Thomas Moran sketches sold in New York.
Possibly of landscapes of Yellowstone Park
in the United States. Police believe up to 40, worth up to £10,000,
were created by Greenhalgh, six or seven of which are unaccounted
for. He claimed each one only took him thirty minutes to forge, and
that a former mayor of Bolton had given them to an ancestor of his
who worked for the mayor as a cleaner.[47]
- L S
Lowry. The Meeting House. A pastel, one of a "clutch
of paintings" by Lowry.[17]
The Greenhalghs claimed it was a 21st birthday present by Olive's
gallery owner father[5
], and even that some were gifted by Lowry
himself. They had copied letters from the artist, inserting their
names in to make it look like they were great friends. For example,
this letter dated 16 June 1946:
Dear George, Thank you very much for your recent letter and
cheque for the paintings. I have about finished the [illegible] but
I will hold onto it untill [sic] I am(?) ready. I will slip round to the
yard on Wed. L S Lowry. Received 45.0.0 for paintings[48]
One of the Lowrys, perhaps the one mentioned above, sold as a
replica, for somewhere between "several hundred pounds"[5
] and £5,000. Eventually, put up for auction by
new owners in Kent as genuine item, for £70,000.[1
]
- 1999. Two gold Roman ornaments. George Greenhalgh withdrew them
from Christies when the auction house wanted to do a scientific
analysis on them.[44]
- Barbara
Hepworth goose sculpture. Only a photograph known to exist,
before item lost in the late 1920s. The Greehalghs claimed it was
gifted to the family "by the curator of a museum in Leeds" in the
1950s. Worth approximately £200,000 it was later sold to the Henry
Moore Institute in Leeds for £3,000.[49][50]
- Ancient Celtic kilt brooch[52]
- Horatio
Greenough. Bust of Thomas Jefferson,[17]
sold at Sotheby's for £48,000.[44]
And/or Thomas Chatterton[53]
Another bust of John Adam. Sold together at Sothebys for
160,000.
- Henry Moore. A
carved stone head by Henry Moore, which Greenhalgh Snr tried to
convince the Tate Modern, London to buy, claiming to have got it
via his grandmother.[17]
- 2003 Amarna
Princess, a statuette. In the family for "a hundred years."
Authenticated by the British Museum and Sothebys, bought by Bolton
Museum for £440,000, it was on display for three years. A police
raid on the Greenhalgh home discovered two more copies.[54][55]
- 2005. Three Assyrian marble reliefs from Nineveh, including one of an eagle-headed genie and another of soldiers and
horses. They were dated by the British Museum at around 681BC,
supposedly from the Palace of Sennacherib, and thought to be worth
around £250,000 to £300,000. But alerted by Bonhams, their
discrepancies were revealed, and the forgery exposed.[26
][56]
Reactions
In the end, Greenhalgh's artistic ability was downplayed.
Detective Sgt Rapley of the Metropolitan
Police Arts and Antiquities Unit said "Looking at them now I'm
not sure the items would fool anyone, it was the credibility of the
provenances that went with them." [20]
Despite this claim the list of experts and institutions who were
fooled is long, and includes the Tate Modern, the British Museum, the Henry
Moore Institute, and auction houses Bonhams, Christies, Sothebys and other experts
from "Leeds to Vienna."[57]
The Faun was displayed at the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam;[58] while
the Amarna Princess went on display at the South Bank Hayward Art Gallery, in
an exhibition opened by the Queen.[59] Other
unnamed galleries, and various private collectors were fooled as
well.[17]
In fact, institutions proclaimed the works and their achievement
in obtaining them. The Art Institute of Chicago described The
Faun sculpture as a "major rediscovery" and included it in
their "definitive" exhibition on Gauguin.[60] Bolton Museum
hailed their purchase of the Amarna Princess as "a coup," calling
George Greenhalgh "a nice old man who had no idea of the
significance of what he owned."[30
]
After the trial, Bolton Museum scrambled to distance itself and
described itself as "blameless",[61]
insisting that it had followed established procedure.[23
] The presiding judge, William Morris, exonerated
the institution and any Council staff involved, preferring to focus
on what he saw as "misapplied" talent and an "ambitious
conspiracy;"[23
] while the Metropolitan Police Arts and
Antiquities Unit would only admit that Greenhalgh had succeeded "to
a degree".[32]
However, the general public was notably more cynical in its
reaction, being unimpressed by what they perceived as the experts'
incompetence, and the law's heavy-handedness.[62]
Richard Falkiner, the antiquities expert from Bonhams said, "I took
one look at the relief and said 'don't make me laugh'...It was an
obvious fake. It was far too freshly cut, was made of the wrong
stone and was stylistically wrong for the period."[26
]
"The Antiques Rogues
Show"
On January 4, 2009, BBC2 broadcast a dramatisation of the
Greenhalgh story called The Antiques Rogues Show, a play
on the title of the popular BBC series Antiques Road Show,[63]
already used by headline writers. In a letter from prison to the
Bolton News, Shaun Greenhalgh made a number of complaints about the
depiction of himself and his family, calling the drama a "character
assassination".[64]
Gallery
Pictures of the family can be found attached with most articles
cited. The best source of images of the forgeries themselves is the
BBC article.[20]
Those available include:
- the Amarna Princess
- unspecified head of a statue
- Assyrian relief
- Risley Park Lanx
- Hepworth goose
- Moran painting of Yellowstone
- faked letter
- detail of Lowry painting, 'The Meeting House.'[65].
Also included in the BBC article:
- the 1892 catalogue
- Shaun's toolkit
See as well:
Notes
- ^
a
b
c
d Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^ a
b
"Armana Pricess: "I
dismantled art forgers work without realising" - Bolton News 19
December 2009". http://www.theboltonnews.co.uk/news/boltonnews/4812681.Amarna_Princess_____I_dismantled_art_forger___s_workshop_without_realising___/. Retrieved 21 December
2009.
- ^ "The Metropolitan Police
Service's Investigation of Fakes and Forgeries - V&A future
exhibitions". http://www.vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/future_exhibs/index.html/. Retrieved 22 December
2009.
- ^
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007. Minimal references to the brother, but see for examples:
Smith, Amanda. "£1m fake statue: family
charged", The Bolton News, Apr 21, 2007. And Stokes,
Paul. " Family sells fake Egyptian
statue for £400,000", Telegraph, Aug 1, 2007.
- ^
a
b
c Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques Rogues Show: Update
3", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007.
- ^
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007
- ^
Chadwick, Edward. "Con artist set to
appeal", The Bolton News, Nov 21, 2007.
- ^
Milmo, Cahal. "Family of forgers fool art
world with beautifully crafted fakes", New Zealand
Herald, Nov 19, 2007. And Times Online, (no byline).
"The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007. And This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^
Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007; This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^
Re "meticulous" see: Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16,
2007.
- ^
Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^ a
b
c
Grove, Sophie. "Fake It Till You Make
It", Newsweek, Dec 15, 2007.
- ^
Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16,
2007).
- ^
re the half-hour watercolour see This is London, (no
byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; re 3 week statue see Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16,
2007.
- ^
Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007. This was said
by Olive's lawyer, Brian McKenna, so it may have been a ploy on her
behalf.
- ^
re peripherality see: Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007; re frontman,
etc see: International Herald Tribune, (no byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
Nov 16, 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^
Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16, 2007;
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; and Times
Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007. See also discussion of this in Reactions section.
- ^
Malvern, Jack. "The ancient Egypt statue
from Bolton (circa 2003)", Times Online, Mar 27,
2006.
- ^ a
b
c
d
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007.
- ^
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007. And see Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world". The Guardian, Nov, 17 (updated 24),
2007. Note esp here, Ward's updated footnote.
- ^
Re using catalogue details see Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007; re "calcite"
see Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007;re DIY, etc see
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007.
- ^
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; re pretence and
100 years see This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007. Mentioned in most of the articles cited, sometimes
referred to as a relief, bas-relief, raised reliefs, or frieze.
- ^ a
b
c
Macquisten, Ivan. "It was Bonhams and ATG
columnist who first raised alarm over Greenhalgh fakes",
Antiques Trade Gazette, Dec 3, 2007.
- ^
Re "not consistent" see International Herald Tribune, (no
byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
Nov 16, 2007; re "atypical" and "concerns," and "full blown" see
Milmo, Cahal. "Family of forgers fool art
world with beautifully crafted fakes", New Zealand
Herald, Nov 19, 2007; re spelling mistake details see This
is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007. Of the articles cited, so far, Milmo's is the only one to
suggest that George also contributed to the failure of the
scam.
- ^
This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^
An article that details the typical approach of the forger:
Thompson, Clive. "How to make a fake",
New York Magazine, May 24, 2004. Accessed December 26,
2007.
- ^ a
b
Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16,
2007.
- ^ a
b
Artner, Alan. "Art Institute of Chicago
discloses Gauguin sculpture in fact a forgery", Chicago
Tribune, Dec 12, 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
d
Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007.
- ^
re the 850,000 see This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; re 1.5 million see International Herald Tribune,
(no byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
Nov 16, 2007.
- ^
This derived from general public comments attached to cited
articles, especially Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007.
- ^
For "lavish" quote see Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007; for "shabby" see This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; for 'tv' quote see Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007; and for "computer" ref see Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; and for "abject
poverty," quote by Detective Sergeant Vernon Rapley, from the Met's
Art and Antiques Unit see the same. Cf in Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007, in
which the same officer is quoted as describing the conditions as
"relatively frugal."
- ^
re Olive's non-travel see Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; re George's
travel see Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007. It's
not entirely clear whether he actually went to those places, or if
it's just The Guardian referring to local representatives
of international auction houses from "Leeds to Vienna."
- ^
re general hatred, recognition, see Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; re profit, shame,
show, see Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007.
- ^
re the 44 see: Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007; re the 120
see: Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^
International Herald Tribune, (no byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
Nov 16, 2007.
- ^
Bunyan, Paul. "Downfall of council house
art fakers", Telegraph, Nov 18, 2007.
- ^
Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world". The Guardian, Nov, 17 (updated 24),
2007.
- ^
Flynn, Tom. "Faking It",Art
Quarterly, Summer 2007.
- ^
Pallister, David. "Background:'The antique road
show,", Guardian, Jan 28, 2008.
- ^ a
b
c
d
Pallister, David. "Background:'The antique road
show,", Guardian, Jan 28, 2008.
- ^
Bolton Museum, (no byline). "Amarna Princess
statement", Bolton Museum, Nov 29, 2007.
- ^
Bailey, Martin. "Revealed: Art Institute of
Chicago Gaugain sculpture is fake", The Art Newspaper,
Dec 12, 2007.
- ^
Milmo, Cahal."Family of forgers fooled art
world with array of finely crafted", Independent, Nov
17, 2007; Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques Rogues Show: Update
3", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007; This is
London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007.
- ^
See the images attached in: Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007
- ^
Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques Rogues Show: Update
3", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007;This is
London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007
- ^
Bunyan, Nigel. "Downfall of council house
art fakers", Telegraph, Nov 18, 2007. Accessed
December 13, 2007.
- ^
Lovell, Jeremy. "Octogenerian British art
forger sentenced", New Zealand Herald, November 17,
2007. Accessed December 26, 2007.
- ^
International Herald Tribune, (no byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
Nov 16, 2007.
- ^
Milmo, Cahal. "Family of forgers fooled art
world with array of finely crafted", Independent,
November 17, 2007. Accessed December 13, 2007.
- ^
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; This is
London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^
Flynn, Tom. "Faking It", Art
Quarterly, Summer 2007.
- ^
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007; This is
London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; Chadwick, Edward. "Con artist set to
appeal", The Bolton News, Nov 21, 2007.
- ^
Re "Tate Modern," etc see This is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries", Nov
16, 2007; re from "Leeds to Vienna," see Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007.
- ^
Bailey, Martin. "Revealed: Art Institute of
Chicago is a fake", Dec 12, 2007.
- ^
Stokes, Paul. "Family sells fake Egyptian
statue for 400,00", Telegraph, Aug 1, 2007.
- ^
Bailey, Martin. "Revealed: Art Institute of
Chicago is a fake", The Art Newspaper, Dec 12,
2007.
- ^
Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, Nov 16, 2007.
But, again, see note above re "coup."
- ^
See those articles which allow comments, for example, Chadwick,
Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, Nov 17, 2007; Times
Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
- ^
BBC programme details
- ^
The Bolton News online
January 27, 2009. "I do not believe my family has been
portrayed fairly," - Amarna Princess forger by Paul
Keavaney
- ^
Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, Nov 17, 2007. For full image of
the (same?) Lowry see Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton", Nov 17,
2007.
References
- Artner, Alan. "Art Institute of Chicago
discloses Gauguin sculpture in fact a forgery", Chicago
Tribune, December 12, 2007. Accessed December 13, 2007.
- Bolton Museum, (no byline). "Amarna Princess
statement", Bolton Museum, November 29, 2007. Accessed
December 15, 2007.
- Bailey, Martin. "Revealed: Art Institute of
Chicago Gaugain sculpture is fake", The Art Newspaper,
December 12, 2007. Accessed December 13, 2007.
- Bunyan, Nigel. "Downfall of council house
art fakers", Telegraph, November 18, 2007. Accessed
December 13, 2007.
- Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show
update", The Bolton News, November 17, 2007. Accessed
November 18, 2007.
- Chadwick, Edward. "Antiques rogues show: update
3", The Bolton News, November 17, 2007. Accessed
November 30, 2007.
- Chadwick, Edward. "Con artist set to
appeal", The Bolton News, November 21, 2007. Accessed
November 30, 2007.
- Fenton, James. "Fakes and counterfeits",
The Guardian, November 24, 2007. Accessed November 30,
2007.
- Flynn, Tom. "Faking It", Art
Quarterly, Summer 2007. Accessed December 13, 2007.
- International Herald Tribune (no byline). "Elderly couple, son
sentenced for creating knockoff art and antiques for 17 years",
International Herald Tribune, November 16, 2007. Accessed
November 18, 2007.
- Grove, Sophie. "Fake It Till You Make
It", Newsweek, December 15, 2007. Accessed December
17, 2007.
- Kelly, James. "Fraudsters who resented the
art market", BBC News, November 16, 2007. Accessed
November 17, 2007.
- Linton, Deborah. "Family con that fooled the
art world", Manchester Evening News, November 16,
2007. Accessed November 18, 2007.
- Lovell, Jeremy. "Octogenarian British art
forger sentenced", New Zealand Herald, November 17,
2007. Accessed November 20, 2007.
- Macquisten, Ivan. "It was Bonhams and ATG
columnist who first raised alarm over Greenhalgh fakes",
Antiques Trade Gazette, December 3, 2007. Accessed
December 17, 2007.
- Malvern, Jack. "The ancient Egypt statue
from Bolton (circa 2003)", Times Online, March 27,
2006. Accessed December 4, 2007.
- Milmo, Cahal. "Family of forgers fool art
world with beautifully crafted fakes", New Zealand
Herald, November 19, 2007. Accessed November 20, 2007.
- Milmo, Cahal."Family of forgers fooled art
world with array of finely crafted", Independent,
November 17, 2007. Accessed December 13, 2007.
- Smith, Amanda. "£1m fake statue: family
charged", The Bolton News, April 21, 2007. Accessed
November 30, 2007.
- Stokes, Paul. " Family sells fake Egyptian
statue for £400,000", Telegraph, August 1, 2007.
Accessed November 30, 2007.
- This Is London, (no byline). "The artful codgers:
pensioners who conned British museums with £10m forgeries",
This Is London, November 16, 2007. Accessed November 18,
2007.
- Times Online, (no byline). "The £10m art collection that
was forged by a family in their garden shed in Bolton",
Times Online, November 17, 2007. Accessed November 17,
2007.
- Times Online, (no byline). "Octogenarian art-forgers
bought to justice", Times Online, November 16, 2007.
Accessed November 22, 2007.
- Thompson, Clive. "How to make a fake", New
York Magazine, May 24, 2004. Accessed December 26, 2007.
- Ward, David. "How garden shed fakers fooled
the art world", The Guardian, November 17, 2007.
Accessed November 17, 2007.