Art Thieves, Fakers and Fraudsters: The New Zealand Story

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Art Thieves, Fakers and Fraudsters: The New Zealand Story
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Penelope Jackson
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:1
Dimensions(mm): Height 205,Width 137
Category/GenreForgery and theft of artwork
ISBN/Barcode 9781927249512
ClassificationsDewey:364.16
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Awa Press
Imprint Awa Press
Publication Date 30 September 2016
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

Penelope Jackson documents New Zealand's most scandalous art crimes of the last 100 years - some notorious but others covered up by embarrassed owners and institutions. They include a near-life-sized nude mysteriously stolen from the Christchurch's McDougall Art Gallery and never seen again; an international court battle around ownership of major Italian paintings stolen from their Jewish owners by the Nazis, bought by a NZ soldier during WWII and later sold to Dunedin Public Art Gallery; a leading NZ painter who sold copies of his work as originals; paintings illegally sold by an unscrupulous art dealer; a blatant theft from the Auckland Art Gallery, and the embarrassing rip-offs by Goldie forger Karl Sim. Jackson shows that NZ is far from immune to the criminal activities increasingly affecting art around the world. 2015 saw the establishment of the NZ Art Crime Research Trust, of which Jackson is a founding trustee. Art Thieves, Fakes and Fraudsters will be launched first at the September 30 opening of a major art crime exhibition, The Empty Frame, at Waikato Museum, and featured at the trust's second symposium, City Gallery Wellington, October 15.

Author Biography

Penelope Jackson is a prominent New Zealand art historian and frequent public speaker. She worked at the Tauranga Art Gallery from its inception, first as curator, then as director, until 2015. She is a founding member of the NZ Art Crime Research Trust, which presented the inaugural New Zealand Art Crime Research Symposium at Wellington's City Gallery on September 19, 2015.

Reviews

"Jackson has pursued all manner of research trails that have included local and international interviews, and detective work in galleries and auction houses, and in front of paintings . . . The book is absolutely fascinating." --Paula Green, Sunday Star-Times