
可借阅:*
链接这些题名
已订购
评论 (2)
出版社周刊评论
A reporter for the Honolulu Star-Bulletin penetrates the sleazy netherworld of the art business in this tangled investigative report. In the 1980s, Catterall contends, thousands of art collectors and investors unknowingly bought fake prints purported to be signed originals by Dali, Chagall, Miro and other famous artists. Dali, who died in 1989, is portrayed here as ``the P. T. Barnum of art,'' an avaricious huckster who, aided by his wife, Gala, used pre-signed print papers and dealt with shady publishers to create a $12-million-a-year racket. Efforts to crack down on unscrupulous galleries and boiler-room operations brought together the Federal Trade Commission, state agencies and police departments from New York and Los Angeles. Catterall focuses on a sensational 1989-1990 trial in Honolulu involving prints allegedly made by Dali, Chagall and Hollywood celebrities. A useful appendix lists genuine Dali lithographs. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus评论
Greed more than art is the dominant theme of this overextended and overwritten but nonetheless engrossing exposé by the Honolulu Star-Bulletin reporter who first broke this story of an international fine-art scam. According to Catterall, greed has pervaded the art world, and by the mid-80's it ruled art personages from Salvador Dali to shady dealers who produced and peddled so-called ``limited-edition'' graphics and sculptures, to ``art-for-investment'' buyers who viewed their ``collections'' on a par with pork-belly futures. Catterall unreels the tangled skein of his story as it stretches from the Costa Brava to Paris to Secaucus, New Jersey, to Beverly Hills to Waikiki. His overdetailing can try the reader's patience at times, but among the plethora of names, dates, locales, and inventory figures are enough startling facts to sustain interest. The author reveals, for example, that Peter Moore, a Dali ``secretary,'' estimated that by 1985 some 350,000 blank sheets of paper signed by the surrealist were in existence, ready to be imprinted with whatever images forgers decided would sell. Catterall explores the ins and outs of copyright sales; the underground network of fakes and forgeries; the pie-in-the-sky promises of self-proclaimed ``art consultants''; and experts' contradictory definitions of what constitutes an ``original'' print. Also portrayed: the half-sad, half-hilarious story of ``celebrity artists'' like Red Skelton. Far too long, but, still, a revealing cautionary tale that says much about American society in the past two decades. (Photographs--not seen.)