Crime & Safety

Orlando Museum Of Art Victim Of Basquiat Counterfeit Scheme: DOJ

A California storage unit flipper admitted his role in a scheme that landed 25 counterfeit Basquiat paintings in an Orlando museum: DOJ.

ORLANDO, FL — A former auctioneer from California admitted to lying to FBI agents about the provenance of fake Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings seized from the Orlando Museum of ARt, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Michael Barzman, 45, of North Hollywood, California, agreed to plead guilty to making false statements to the FBI during an interview in August. As part of the plea deal, he admitted to creating the fake works of art with another man, according to a court filing.

According to the justice department, Barzman and a second man – identified in the court documents as “J.F.” – created the fake Basquiats in 2012 in a scheme to market the bogus artwork. Some of

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For a time, the scheme worked. The bogus art was sold and made its way through the art market, forming the basis of an exhibition that opened in February 2022 at the Orlando Museum of Art called “Heroes & Monsters: Jean-Michel Basquiat.”

During an interview with FOX 35 News in Orlando in June 2022, retired FBI agent Robert Wittman, the founder of the FBI Art Crime Team, said the fake Basquiat paintings had been unnoticed for years. "The move to have the exhibit at the [Orlando] museum is what triggered this investigation," he told the TV station.

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The week the FBI raided the museum, OMA replaced its director, Aaron De Groft, FOX reported, and the museum announced new procedures on how to assess future exhibitions.

"The Orlando Museum of Art awaits the investigation's conclusion and hopes it brings justice to all victims," OMA Board of Trustees Chairperson Mark Elliott said in a statement to FOX 35 News.

Basquiat, a New York graffiti artist who died at age 27 in 1988 has long been a favorite artist for fraudsters. He signed and dated his prints in pencil, and much of his work does not come with a certificate of authenticity, making provenance key to proving a genuine Basquiat work of art. His 1982 painting, "Untitled," sold for a record $110.5 million in 2017, becoming the second highest price for an American artwork at auction.

The forgers spent little time on their creations, authorities said.

“J.F. spent a maximum of 30 minutes on each image and as little as five minutes on others, and then gave them to [Barzman] to sell on eBay,” according to the plea agreement. “[Barzman] and J.F. agreed to split the money that they made from selling the Fraudulent Paintings. J.F. and [Barzman] created approximately 20-30 artworks by using various art materials to create colorful images on cardboard.”

Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked. (U.S. Department of Justice).
Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked. (U.S. Department of Justice).
Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked (U.S. Department of Justice).

At the time, Barzman ran an auction business focused on purchasing and reselling the contents from unpaid storage units. He admitted to prosecutors that he used his business to create a fake provenance for the bogus Basquiats by claiming in a notarized document that the fraudulent paintings were found inside a storage unit that a well-known screenwriter had rented, according to the court filing.

According to the scheme, television screenwriter Thad Mumford stashed the collection he bought from Basquiat for just $5,000 in the 1980s in a storage unit until 2012, when he stopped paying for the unit, the New York Post.

Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked. (U.S. Department of Justice).
Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked. (U.S. Department of Justice).
Prosecutors allege this painting is part of a scheme by a Los Angeles auctioneer to pass off counterfeit Jean-Michel Basquiat paintings to buyers, and it nearly worked. (U.S. Department of Justice).

“Most of the featured works had, in fact, been created by [Barzman] and J.F.,” Barzman admitted in his plea agreement.

The FBI executed a search warrant at the Orlando Museum of Art in June 2022 and seized 25 pieces that Basquiat purportedly had created. Shortly after, during an August 18, 2022, interview with FBI special agents, Barzman denied making the paintings himself, prosecutors allege.

“At the time of the interview, [Barzman] knew that he and J.F. had created the paintings and that his statements to the contrary were untruthful,” Barzman admitted in his plea agreement. “His statement that he did not make the paintings or have someone make them for him were material to the activities and decisions of the FBI and were capable of influencing the agency’s decisions and activities.”

He went on to admit to the FBI in October 2022, “it was a lie” that the artwork had come from the storage locker, but he continued to deny making the fraudulent paintings – even after agents showed him the back of a painting on cardboard seized from the Orlando Museum of Art in which his name appears on a mailing label that had been painted over, according to prosecutors.

The felony crime of making false statements to a government agency carries a sentence of up to five years in federal prison.

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