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Auctioneer to plead guilty for sales of fake Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings

This evidence photo released by the United States Attorney Central District of California shows bogus artwork, a fake Jean-Michel Basquiat. A Southern California man who authorities say tried to sell $6 million worth of phony paintings he claimed were created by Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat and other modern masters has been sentenced to five years in federal prison. Philip Righter of West Hollywood was sentenced Wednesday in a federal court in Miami in a Los Angeles case. (United States Attorney Central District of California via AP)
A California man has agreed to plead guilty to creating counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings (Picture: AP)

A former auctioneer has agreed to plead guilty to creating dozens of fake Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings, which were eventually exhibited by a major art museum.

Michael Barzman, 45, of North Hollywood, California, was charged with lying to FBI agents about a scheme to sell counterfeit Basquiat paintings, US Attorney E Martin Estrada’s office said on Tuesday.

According to the plea agreement signed by Barzman in March, he collaborated with an an accomplice, identified only as JF, to create the paintings in 2012 and split the profits 50/50.

Basquiat’s artwork has fetched record sums of money in recent years, with one painting selling for $110.5million at Sotheby’s in 2017.

FILE - The entrance to an exhibit by artist Jean-Michel Basquiat is seen at the Orlando Museum of Art on June 1, 2022, in Orlando, Fla. A former Los Angeles auctioneer has agreed to plead guilty in a cross-country art fraud scheme where he created fake artwork and falsely attributed the paintings to artist Jean-Michel Basquiat. The paintings ultimately wound up at the Orlando Museum of Art in Florida before they were seized by federal agents last year in a scandal that roiled the museum and led to its CEO's departure. (AP Photo/John Raoux,File)
The paintings were displayed at an Orlando Museum of Art exhibit entitled ‘Heroes and Monsters’ in 2022 (Picture: AP)

‘JF spent a maximum of 30 minutes on each image and as little as five minutes on others, and then gave them to defendant to sell on eBay,’ the court document reads. Barzman and JF created about 20-30 paintings in 2012 on pieces of cardboard – some of which were taken from FedEx packages sent to the swindler’s home.

‘After finishing the images, defendant and JF placed them outdoors to expose them to the elements and thus create an aged appearance consistent with works made in the 1980s when Basquiat was painting,’ prosecutors said.

Barzman and JF then worked to establish a fraudulent provenance for the paintings. Provenance is the record of ownership of a piece of artwork dating back to the original artist.

Barzman was able to do this through his auctioneering business, which focused on purchasing and reselling the contents of storage units.

FILE -Law enforcement personnel work outside the Orlando Museum of Art in Orlando, Fla., on June 24, 2022. A former Los Angeles auctioneer has agreed to plead guilty in a cross-country art fraud scheme where he created fake artwork and falsely attributed the paintings to artist Jean-Michel Basquiat. The paintings ultimately wound up at the museum before they were seized by federal agents last year in a scandal that roiled the museum and led to its CEO's departure. (Willie J. Allen Jr./Orlando Sentinel via AP)
FBI agents raid and seize the counterfeit paintings from the Orlando Museum of Art (Picture: AP)

Barzman’s business purchased a storage unit previously belonging to Thaddeus Mumford Jr, a prominent screenwriter from the 1970s through 1990s who worked on television shows including M*A*S*H, Home Improvement, and The Cosby Show.

Barzman claimed he found the fake Basquiat pieces in Mumford’s storage unit after he died in 2018. After they were sold on TKTKTK, they were eventually exhibited as part of the ‘Thaddeus Mumford, Jr Venice Collection.’

When FBI agents interviewed Barzman in June, 2022, he repeated this story, telling them the paintings ‘might have been’ Basquiat’s. At a later interview that August, he told the FBI ‘I was like almost 90% sure they did.’

The paintings eventually made their way to the Orlando Museum of Art, where they were exhibited as part of a Basquiat collection from February 12 to June 30, 2022.

FILE - A banner advertising an exhibit by artist Jean-Michel Basquiat hangs from the exterior of the Orlando Museum of Art, where a collection of Basquiat's paintings were on display, on June 2, 2022, in Orlando, Fla. A former Los Angeles auctioneer has agreed to plead guilty in a cross-country art fraud scheme where he created fake artwork and falsely attributed the paintings to Basquiat. The paintings ultimately wound up at the Orlando Museum of Art before they were seized by federal agents last year in a scandal that roiled the museum and led to its CEO's departure. (AP Photo/John Raoux, File)
A banner advertising the Jean-Michel Basquiat exhibit is seen at the Orlando Museum of Art (Picture: AP)

However, critics quickly pointed out that the paintings might be fake.

The museum’s art director, Aaron De Groft, insisted that the pieces were legitimate. ‘My reputation is at stake as well,’ he told the New York Times.

The FBI eventually raided the Orlando Museum of Art, seizing the counterfeit paintings on June 24, 2022 – just six days before the exhibit was set to close. De Groft was fired five days later.

In the plea agreement, prosecutors revealed that FBI agents noticed another startling clue about one painting’s authenticity: ‘agents pointed out that a shipping label bearing defendant’s name and former address was attached to the cardboard on which the painting had been created. There was dried paint on top of the shipping label.’

Barzman eventually admitted to the scheme after another interview in October 2022. He faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison for the charge of lying to a government agency.

‘Mr Barzman was drowning in medical debt after battling cancer for decades,’ the counterfeiter’s attorney stated. ‘In desperation, he participated in this scheme because he was afraid of losing his health insurance. Since then, he has cooperated and done everything asked of him to compensate for his poor judgement.’

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