overview
literary
historic
currency
religious
antiquities
art forgery
antiques
collectibles
brands
components
performance
registration
certification
wills
email
forensics
prevention
Aust law
other law
fiction
memoirs
landmarks

related
Guides:
Security &
InfoCrime
Intellectual
Property
Governance
Information
Economy
Consumers
& Trust
e-Publishing
|
collectibles
This page considers fraud and the forgery of collectibles,
from militaria and toys to scrawls by serial killers.
It covers -
introduction
Misrepresentation, complaisance, gullibility and forgery
of outside the fine arts mirrors the environment discussed
on the preceding page of this profile, although generally
not attracting the same attention from the media or from
government agencies.
As with Old Master paintings the market for lesser collectibles
is driven by greed, enthusiasm and the self-interest of
intermediaries, who on occasion turn a blind eye or are
actively complicit in misrepresentation of what is being
sold.
cloning contemporary classics
The preceding page highlighted forgery and misrepresentation
in the antique market. Somewhat different challenges are
apparent in the market for 'contemporary classics' - from
Rietveld and Le Corbusier chairs to Philippe Stark juicers.
Some of those works are going for substantial sums, for
example
- a
1948 Carlo Mollino (1905-1973) trestle table auctioned
by Christie's for US$3.8 million
- items
by Jean Prouvé (1901-1984) - the Kangourou chair
for US$136,800, a reading table for the Maison de l'Etudiant
for US$556,800 and a pair of perforated metal doors
for the Maison Tropicale for US$680,000
- a
Marc Newson Lockheed lounge for $200,000
- an
Eileen Gray (1878-1976) 1923 lacquered console table
for US$534,000 and lacquered screen for US$374,000
That pricing is fostering the forgery of what are claimed
to be original items, with vendors falsely asserting an
item's authenticity and on occasion providing a phony
provenance document or even signature.
Perhaps more insidiously, the interaction of consumer
desire (and ignorance) with commercial opportunism is
encouraging unauthorised copies and imitations. Those
knockoffs often sacrifice quality, by for example omitting
particular design features or blurring standards (using
glue rather than stitching or dovetailing, paint rather
than lacquer, screws rather than brazing).
The problem is exacerbated by inconsistencies in the global
patchwork of design protection and enforcement discussed
in the Intellectual Property
guide elsewhere on this site. In much of continental Europe,
for example, furniture designs are classed as works of
art, with protection for 75
years after the designer's death. In the UK and Italy
they have been classed as commercial designs with protection
for a flat 15 years.
That has resulted in a bewildering range of retailers
offering designer 'originals'. Knoll for example reportedly
produces 1,400 authorised editions of the Mies van der
Rohe Barcelona chair each year, competing with
an estimated 40,000 rip-offs. The authorised manufacturer
of the Arne Jacobsen Egg chair reportedly launches
around 100 law suits per year.
crafts
Media coverage of craft fraud has centred on incidents
such as Jeremy Broadway's forgery of ceramics by master
potters Lucie Rie and Bernard Leach, each piece being
valued by leading auction houses at around £6,000.
There has been less attention to misrepresentation of
traditional crafts, with some Australian indigenous communities
for example supporting an authenticity
mark after discovering egregious abuses such as 'authentic'
boomerangs, didjeridus, fishtraps and baskets imported
from Indonesia or the Philippines but retailed as the
work of that community.
postage stamps
A preceding page of this profile noted
that economies in crisis have sometimes experienced counterfeiting
of postage stamps and bank notes, reflecting both the
use of stamps as a form of currency, the ease of manufacturing
fake stamps and the likelihood that law enforcement agencies
would concentrate on other offences.
Such forgery is usually on an industrial scale and concerned
with low value items for day to day use, eg making a payment
to an government office or sending a letter via a postal
network. It is thus distinct from forgery of stamps
sought by collectors or misrepresentation of such stamps
by dealers and experts in an effort to defraud collectors.
That forgery is unsurprising, given the prices
paid for particular stamps (eg a 1847 Mauritius Blue
stamp sold for US$3.8m in 1993) and demand by collectors
for a finite supply of the commodity.
The physical characteristics of stamps, lack of provenance
and low forensic expertise of many collectors means that
forgery is an issue for dealers and collectors with small
collections and those with multi-million dollar collections.
It has inspired a large although uneven literature (one
pointer is here).
Most forgery is anonymous - and arguably undetected -
but particular forgers have received media attention and
on occasion their work now sells for more than the items
that they were copying.
An example is forgeries by Jean de Sperati (1884-1957)
of pre-1920 stamps from Australia (the red 1913 £2
stamp) and Hong Kong (olive 1865 96 cent stamp).
In an echo of the van
Meegeren case, Sperati was exposed in 1942 when Vichy
officials prosecuted him for illegal export of stamps
that he claimed had a 60,000 franc value. An expert witness
testified that the real value of the collection was over
234,000 francs. Facing a long prison sentence for illegal
asset transfers, Sperati responded that the stamps were
bogus. In the 1950s he confessed that he had been active
as a forger for over 30 years.
His techniques are illustrated in The Work of Jean
de Sperati II (London: Royal Philatelic Society 2001)
by Robson Lowe & Carl Walske.
militaria
Much militaria collecting is a forbidden pleasure, like
acquisition of pornography, and the lust of collectors
for particular items collides with uncertainty about where
those items came from. That is unsurprising when many
items have an industrial nature and at one stage were
loot - souvenired off the battlefield, brought home as
spoils of war, even smuggled past military police - or
are prohibited in jurisdictions such as Germany.
Fetishism is reflected in the proliferation of published
guides such as the Collector's Handbook of WWII German
Daggers and the multi-volume Collector's Guide
to SS and Political Cuffbands.
It is also reflected in what appears to be a thriving
industry (based in Russia, China and South Korea) manufacturing
fake uniforms, belt-buckles, badges, medals, weapons,
flags, helmets and other items that supposedly originated
in Nazi Germany or its allies.
China appears to have the lead in production of swords
claimed as coming from Hirohito's armed forces; it has
also joined Italy in the production of supposedly mediaeval
and early renaissance armour and swords.
The quality of many of the fakes is lamentable, replete
with mis-spellings, synthetics purporting to be silk or
leather, base metals (or even plastic) masquerading as
bronze or silver, documents generated on a laser printer
from a blurry JPEG. That apparently does not deter consumers
who trust in eBay or its equivalent, lust after a collectible
and lack the discernment to ask hard questions about provenance.
Estimates of production and of retail value - much of
which takes place through online fora such as eBay or
via fansites - are contentious. One Melbourne dealer commented
in 2004 that around 60% of 'Nazi' items offered for sale
were obvious forgeries.
toys
Collecting toys - from teddybears to model trains, billycarts
and clockwork tin robots -
reflects a proustian search for lost time, interest in
popular culture, aesthetic values and escalating prices
for rare or merely sought-after items. Landmark prices
include US$176,000 for a 1905 Steiff teddybear, £12,650
for a single Dinky toy and US$231,000 for an 1875 US tin
toy.
As with cars, collectors have encountered a range of problems,
including the lack of provenance (a Rembrandt tends to
be better documented than something bought 70 years ago
to sate a mewling infant) and the physical characteristics
of the items.
Some buyers thus discover that a seller has substituted
a figure from another set for a damaged or missing piece.
Others 'improve' items by repainting them to disguise
flaws or lack of authenticity. Some sellers simply use
authentic packaging to disguise later items; others gather
authentic items and create supposedly original packaging
(on the basis that inclusion of the box can add a premium
of 25% to 100%).
Some 'remanufacture' but claim authenticity, eg pass off
modern reproductions of fin de siecle lead soldiers
as the genuine item. Chinese workshops are now making
reproductions of 1930s and 1950s Japanese tin toys that
are carefully 'distressed' to give the requisite look
of authenticity; others are reported to be bashing out
1960s pedal-cars.
memorabilia
The market for memorabilia - a hair from Napoleon's horse
(or from curlers supposedly used by Marilyn Monroe), a
quill used by Thomas Jefferson, a baseball signed by Ty
Cobb, football shorts worn by Gary Ablett - is driven
by enthusiasm rather than expertise. Buffs and speculators
will pay substantial sums for the detritus of history;
publishers will put aside the requisite scepticism in
promoting items that are demonstrably not authentic.
Recent sales of Titanic memorabilia for example
include £30,000 for flask, £47,000 for a handwritten
account by survivor Mrs Churchill Candee and £22,000
for a letter from first class passenger Stanley May. Those
items appear to be authentic. The same cannot be said
for a succession of 'Marilyn Monroe' frauds, including
the receipts, handbags, letters and other items published
by Vanity Fair in 2008.
Elsewhere on this site we have discussed the market for
and legal restrictions on the trade in what has been dubbed
'murderabilia' -
artwork, clothing, postcards and even hair of notorious
figures such as Ted Kaczynski, Chopper Read, Al Capone,
Martin Bryant or John Wayne Gacy.
That trade has not attracted substantial academic attention
or protection from consumer advocates and consumption
is stigmatised. As with the adult
content industry, abuses thus broadly are not policed
by trade practices agencies and consumer complaints (if
indeed expressed) may not be heard.
The absence of detailed studies means that there is considerable
uncertainty about the size of the murderabilia market,
the prevalence of forgeries or the extent to which unhappy
consumers have detected bogus material and then sought
recourse.
The nature of the market, with much contemporary material
being illicit or quasi-illicit, without readily verifiable
provenance or mechanisms for verification (an Old Master
painting is likely to be described or even widely reproduced
in scholarly works but the same cannot be said for scribbles
by a serial killer or hairs supposedly plucked from the
killer's beard), means that the authenticity of much murderabilia
must be regarded as deeply suspect.
If you are paying US$800 for a Charles Manson scribble
you probably are not getting what you asked for, although
as we have commented elsewhere on this site you (and the
purchaser of the "guranteed genuine" Hitler
letter) are perhaps getting what you deserve.
next page (brands)
|
|