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AUGUSTE RODIN
D'Airain Collection
Media on the MacLaren Art Centre, Canada
http://rodin-web.org/collections/major/maclaren.htm
MACLAREN ART
CENTRE / ART CITY, BARRIE, ONTARIO
MacLaren Art Cente
37 Mulcaster Street
Barrie, ON Canada L4M 3M2
(North of Toronto)
Tel. 001 - 705 - 721 96 96
Fax 001 - 705 - 739 13 91
As reported by ArtBusiness and ArtFocus, 100 Rodin plasters were
donated to this Museum in the little town of Barrie, north of
Toronto, Ontario.
A collection of 21 bronzes and 21 original plasters have been
donated in April 2001. When the donation process is complete the
collection will include another 29 bronzes and 29 plasters. In sum,
the donation is claimed to be worth Cdn$ 40 Million. A full size
version of the Thinker(1903) is valued at Cdn$ 1.6 Million.
The works have been exhibited at the Royal Ontario Museum from Fall
2001 till Spring 2002. This exhibition caused a bitter controversy
between the Canadian Museums and the Musée Rodin in Paris, which
claimed the plasters - coming from the settlement of the Rudier
Foundry - would be foundry duplicates, damaged and mollified by
replication processes.
Most of the bronzes in the collection were cast in 1999-2000 and
will be part of the ArtCity project. ArtCity is an initiative of the
MacLaren and the City of Barrie to promote cultural tourism by
placing art in parkland and public spaces, so that the whole town
becomes a City of Art. The MacLaren is also looking into building a
separate pavillion to house the plasters and some of the smaller
bronzes.
The Museum Website informs us that prior to MacLaren's acquisition,
only one plaster and less than thirty bronze and marble sculptures
by Rodin were known to be open to public view across Canada.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/canadians-lose-appeal-over-damage-to-rodin-sculptures-1.624216
Canadians lose appeal over damage
to Rodin sculptures
CBC Arts · Posted: Nov 22, 2006
A group of prominent Canadians will not be reimbursed for damage
allegedly done to their collection of disputed Rodin sculptures when
a representative of a French museum inspected them, the Ontario
Court of Appeal ruled Tuesday.
The court overturned a previous Superior Court ruling giving the
group of businessmen $10,000 after an inspectorfrom the Musée Rodin
allegedly damaged the works of art during an inspection of their
authenticity.
The court upheld the Superior Court decision allowing the
inspector's report to go to the France government, despite
protestations from the businessmen that he was unqualified.
The 28 plaster sculptures have been at the centre of a long-running
fight between the collectors and the Musée Rodin, an institution
dedicated to the works of master sculpture Auguste Rodin, known for
The Thinker and The Kiss.
The sculptures were purchased from an Italian dealer by a group of
businessmen including Rolling Stones tour manager Michael Cohl,
pollster Martin Goldfarb and Allan Slaight, executive chairman of
Standard Broadcasting. The investors originally intended to donate
the sculptures to the MacLaren Art Centre in Barrie, Ont.
But a dispute between the businessmen and the French government
arose soon after when the curator at the Musée Rodin called their
legitimacy as genuine artworks into question just before a 2002
exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.
"I've had a chance to see these plasters," Musée Rodincurator
Antoinette Romaine wrote in a Toronto newspaper in 2001.
"And I was disappointed by what they presented. I consider that
they're sorry plasters who, in fact, were just tools for work and
not authentic pieces of art."
William Moore, the MacLaren Art Centre director until 2004, defended
the exhibition at the time as authentic and said their display
waslegitimate.
"We're not saying that they are anything but beautiful foundry
plasters, part of the process of Rodin," Moore said.
The French museum, which owns the rights to all of Rodin's works in
France, is involved in a wide-ranging investigation into the
possibility of alleged fakes of Rodin plasters and bronzes.
The French government sent inspector Gilles Perrault to take
photographs, measurements and conduct tests on the surface as part
of an effort to determine the authenticity and nature of the
sculptures. The collectors allege that during this process, several
small pieces fell off some of the sculptures.
The sculptures have been in storage at the MacLaren since the 2004
decision to allow the inspection. The museum said in June it would
not be taking the collection into its permanent collection, leaving
them in the hands of the individual collectors.
http://www.rodin-web.org/symp/articles/defended.htm
Sculpture exhibit defended after
head of Paris Rodin Museum calls it a fraud
Tuesday July 31 5:12 PM EST
By ANDREA BAILLIE
TORONTO (CP) - A Canadian exhibit featuring the work of Auguste
Rodin is authentic, says the man behind the project, even though a
Paris museum devoted to the famous sculptor has suggested the
display is a fraud.
"We have immense documentation supporting (authenticity)," said
William Moore, who spent several years trying to obtain the Rodin
pieces as director of the MacLaren Art Centre in Barrie, Ont. Moore
defended the exhibit Tuesday after Jacques Vilain, director of the
Rodin Museum in Paris, wrote a letter to a Toronto newspaper
condemning the pieces, which are to be displayed next month at the
Royal Ontario Museum.
"We have always maintained the collection in question cannot be
considered authentic," wrote Vilain. "The public must not be
misled."
The exhibit, featuring plaster casts by the French sculptor renowned
for works like The Thinker and The Kiss, is eventually to be housed
at a museum in Barrie.
In his letter, Vilain insisted the collection, which is valued at
$40 million and divided between bronzes and plasters, is not
authentic because it includes foundry plaster casts, coated with
substances that could have softened them.
Other items, he says, are enlargements that were made after Rodin
died in 1917.
Responding to Vilain's allegations Tuesday, Moore said foundry
plasters are an essential step in Rodin's creative process and added
that none of the pieces have degraded to the point where they
require significant work.
He also denied the exhibit contains enlargements made after the
sculptor's death.
"We've had conservators spend a great deal of time ... just having
these things looked at," he said. "There is no significant problem
with this.
"All of our presentation ... is within the international standards
of the (International Council of Museums)."
Vilain's letter said he has written the Royal Ontario Museum and the
MacLaren Art Centre to object "in the strongest possible language
(to) the advisability of going ahead with this project."
But William Thorsell, the ROM's president and CEO, said Tuesday he
has no concerns about the exhibit.
"The authenticity I think is clear on the plasters," he said, adding
that the museum exhibit will delve into issues surrounding what
constitutes original sculpture. "We're very interested in the
intellectual and artistic issues around the nature of sculpture, how
sculpture is done, what is 'an original,' what is a copy, what is a
reproduction?" he said.
Much is riding on the project in Barrie, where the Rodin display is
part of a larger project called ArtCity that is designed to promote
cultural tourism in the area. A group of art patrons has agreed to
donate the Rodin sculptures to the newly refurbished MacLaren Art
Centre, which is scheduled to open next month. Moore hopes the
exhibition will travel around the world to raise money to construct
a permanent Rodin Museum in Barrie.
A spokeswoman at the Rodin Museum in Paris said Tuesday that Vilain
was on holiday and unavailable for comment.
https://jonimitchell.com/library/print.cfm?id=686
Rodin Thinkers to the Rom: We
think not, thank you
Toronto Globe and Mail
October 20, 2001
The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto was hoping to host a big
symposium on the French sculptor Auguste Rodin Nov. 6. But with less
than three weeks to go, the response of would-be participants is
less than overwhelming.
Last month the ROM mailed dozens of letters to Rodin scholars and
buffs around the world, inviting them to the Ontario capital to
weigh in on the legacy of the sculptor, using its current,
controversial exhibition of Rodin plasters from Barrie, Ont.'s
MacLaren Art Centre as the hook.
Thus far, only six individuals have reportedly confirmed their
attendance. Organizers had hoped representatives of the Muséé Rodin
in Paris, the executor of the Rodin estate and the institution that
has been the most vociferous in trashing the ROM, would show. But
earlier this month Jacques Vilain, director of the Musée, and
Antoinette Romain, its curator of sculpture, gave them the big non.
Meanwhile, there are reports that institutions in South Korea, Japan
and Vancouver are interested in taking the Rodin show after it
closes in December, but so far nothing has been firmed up. One thing
these places shouldn't take is the contents of the Rodin gift "shop"
at the ROM. It consists largely of clunky plaster reproductions,
most made in Mexico, of such Rodin hits as The Thinker ($125 for the
small one) and Eternal Spring ($425 for the big one). Even one of
the prime movers of the exhibition acknowledged last week that this
stuff is "an embarrassment."
But who knows, maybe the MacLaren Art Centre, home of the 60
plasters, will someday make its own reproduction casts. The centre's
director, William Moore, says he has no plans for this, but there's
pretty much nothing to stop the MacLaren from doing so. Since Rodin
died in 1917, there are no copyright concerns and, despite all the
bleatings of the Musée Rodin, no impediments in terms of legal or
moral rights. Rodins, rain down on us!
https://bluff-rodins.weebly.com/
François-Auguste-René Rodin (12 November 1840 – 17 November 1917),
known as Auguste Rodin (/oʊˈɡuːst roʊˈdæn/ oh-GOOST roh-DAN; French:
[oɡyst ʁɔdɛ̃]), was a French sculptor. Although Rodin is generally
considered the progenitor of modern sculpture, he did not set out to
rebel against the past. He was schooled traditionally, took a
craftsman-like approach to his work, and desired academic
recognition, although he was never accepted into Paris's foremost
school of art.
Auguste Rodin died in 1917
For the last 70 odd years after Auguste Rodin's death in 1917, the
Musee Rodin owned an exclusive "right of reproduction to objects
given by him," which in part and/or whole, fell into the public
domain in the late 1980's. Yet, despite Auguste Rodin's 1916 Will
mandating the "right of reproduction to objects given by him" upon
his death to the State of France, the Musee Rodin has admitted at
one time on their website [subsequently removed] and to this scholar
[in written correspondence] to violating Auguste Rodin Will by using
posthumously reproduced plasters for casting in bronze, rather than
his original lifetime plasters, resulting in 2nd-generation-removed
bronze forgeries, not reproductions, much less sculptures. The Musee
Rodin's fraud is further compounded by their posthumous inscription
of non-disclosed counterfeit "A Rodin" signatures and bogus edition
numbers to these non-disclosed posthumous 2nd-generation-removed
bronze forgeries.
Remember, Auguste Rodin died in 1917. The dead don't posthumously
sign, much less edition.
To add insult to injury, these non-disclosed posthumous
second-generation-removed bronze forgeries with counterfeit "A.
Rodin" signatures in bogus editions have been misrepresented by the
Musee Rodin, museums and collectors as original works of visual art
ie., sculptures, falsely attributed to Auguste Rodin, creating a
false market for huge profiteering through admission fees,
city-state-federal grants, corporate sponsorship, outright sales and
tax write-offs, while deceptively leading the public that they were
in the presence of an original work of art ie., sculpture, much less
something Auguste Rodin created, much less approved.
Remember, Auguste Rodin died in 1917. The dead don't sculpt.
So, when Georges Rudier foundry, that cast non-disclosed posthumous
second-generation-removed bronze forgeries for the Musee Rodin from
1952 to the late 1980's, went bankrupt, the Gruppo Mondiale and its
director Gary Snell snapped up the opportunity to acquire this
bankrupt foundry with its' collection of posthumous plaster
reproductions, authorized by the Musee Rodin, from Auguste Rodin's
original lifetime plasters.
So, instead of a corrupt Musee Rodin having exclusive rights to
flood the marketplace with the sale of non-disclosed
second-generation-removed bronze forgeries with applied counterfeit
"A Rodin" signatures falsely attributed as original works of visual
ie., sculpture to a dead Auguste Rodin, others like Gruppo Mondiale
could now participate and profit almost indistinguishably from the
Musee Rodin's posthumous collection by using the same posthumous
plasters, moulds and the like for casting in bronze.
GRUPPO MONDIALE AND PINOCCHIO
Unfortunately, Gruppo Mondiale is very much like The Coachman in the
old 1940 Disney classic movie Pinocchio. As you may know, the movie
is the story of a wooden puppet named Pinocchio who desperately
wants to become a real little boy. In his journey to become human,
Pinocchio comes across The Coachman’s hench men Honest John and
Gideon who lure him to Pleasure Island to eat whatever he wishes and
create havoc all day when the true and sinster purpose is to turn
wayward boys into donkeys for sale. (Source: Wikipedia)
GRUPPO MONDIALE EST AND MACLAREN ART CENTRE TO SPLIT $135 MILLION In
the Globe and Mail's published March 10, 2004 "Gallery faces closure
over bronzes" article by James Adams, The reporter wrote: "A
multimillion-dollar deal to bring hundreds of bronze sculptures
attributed to the French master Auguste Rodin to a small Ontario art
gallery has collapsed, with the result that the gallery may be
forced to close its doors as early as next month. The MacLaren Art
Centre in Barrie, Ont., a city of about 120,000 people, 90
kilometres north of Toronto, was expecting to take possession last
year of 510 Rodin bronzes, purportedly worth more than $135-million,
from an Italian-based art company, Gruppo Mondiale. Some of these
bronzes would then have been sold to collectors and institutions,
with Gruppo and the MacLaren sharing in the proceeds; others would
have stayed in Barrie as a linchpin to something called ArtCity, an
ambitious project, first conceived in the mid-eighties, to place
sculpture by Canadian and international artists in and around
Barrie, thereby turning the locale into a tourist destination the
equal of Stratford and Niagara-on-the-Lake."
510 RODINS NEVER DELIVERED BY GRUPPO MONDIALE EST Additionally, the
James Adams wrote: "While the MacLaren claims to have clear title to
the bronzes, all supposedly cast from 1999 onwards, it has yet to
see the 10 editions made from each of the 51 Rodins, including such
classics as Eternal Spring and The Age of Bronze. Negotiations
between the MacLaren and Gruppo Mondiale to get the bronzes to
Barrie have been ongoing for more than two years, but reached an
impasse recently. Indeed, there are concerns if all 510 bronzes
actually exist as bronzing experts say it takes anywhere from 31⁄2
months to six months to make one finished, professionally acceptable
bronze, depending on the size and complexity of the object being
cast."
MACLAREN ART CENTRE GOES BANKRUPT In Globe and Mail's published June
14, 2005 "Deal lacked proper checks, report says" article by James
Adams, the reporter wrote: "The 16-page report, more than a year in
the making, was ordered by Barrie's city council last April.
Councillors in the city, with a population of about 130,000, created
the six-member Rodin Transaction Examination Committee upon learning
that the MacLaren Art Centre was facing a deficit of at least
$1-million and unable to make any payments on the $2.7-million it
owed the city for an expansion and renovation of its space."
ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM GAINS $200,000 IN UNPAID BILLS As for the Royal
Ontario Museum, their initial financial stake that turned into a
loss was addressed in a Globe and Mail published January 18, 2003
"Inside the hidden kingdom" article by Sarah Milroy, the reporter
wrote: " last year's Rodin fiasco (which ended up costing the ROM
more than $200,000 in unpaid bills when the MacLaren Art Centre's
proposed world tour of the exhibit found no other takers)."
$40 MILLION DONATION TAX WRITEOFF In the Globe and Mail's published
November 5, 2006 "Canadian collectors cry foul on report" article by
James Adams, the reporter wrote: "At stake is the fate of versions
of some of the world's most famous sculptures, among them three
plaster renditions of The Kiss, two of The Thinker and three of the
Age of Bronze, part of a collection that the 10 businessmen bought
from an Italian dealer in 2000. By donating their 28 plasters to the
MacLaren, a registered Canadian charity, they would have been able
to claim their full market value as a break against taxable income.
At one time, the MacLaren valued the entire Rodin project at more
than $40-million."
WHO ARE THESE BUSINESSMEN? Additionally, in this Globe and Mail
published article, the reporter James Adams names those ten
businessmen. They are: 1) Rolling Stones' tour manager Michael Cohl,
2) broadcasting billionaire Allan Slaight, 3) Toronto investment
banker Robert Foster, 4) pollster Martin Goldfarb, 5) developers
Garnet Watchorn and 6) Graham Goodchild, 7) Standard Broadcasting
CFO David Coriat, 8) venture capitalist Anthony Lloyd, 9) Mad Catz
Interactive founder Pat Brigham and 10) the estate of the late John
M. S. Lecky, Calgary-based founder of Canada 3000 airlines.
GRUPPO MONDIALE EST. PARTNERS WITH RODIN INTERNATIONAL Rodin
International L.C., located at 201 Bird Road in Coral Gables,
Florida, began selling Gruppo Mondiale Est.'s so-called Rodins
sometime after 2002.
On their rodininternational.com/Posthumous.html website, it stated:
"These are only three examples of major sculptors with posthumous
bronzes, but the list could be continued endlessly. The essence of
this is that posthumous casts are an essential part of our
understanding of the artist’s lifetime work. They complete the image
and character of the artist, and sometimes formulate it altogether.
These works are significant additions to their respective
collections and are visited by millions of visitors annually. At
recent auctions some posthumous bronzes have actually sold at much
higher prices than lifetime casts."
https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/72078/Controversial-Rodin-Plaster-Bronze-Exhibit-to-Open-Today
Controversial Rodin Plaster,
Bronze Exhibit to Open Today
September 20, 2001
TORONTO -- The firestorm over an exhibit, entitled "From Plaster to
Bronze: The Sculpture of Auguste Rodin" which opens here Thursday,
continues to simmer between the Rodin Museum in Paris and exhibitors
here.
The exhibit, opening at the Royal Ontario Museum and organized by
the Barrie, Ontario-based Maclaren Art Center, will put on display
40 plaster and 30 bronze casts, including some which were created
after the artist's death in 1917.
The artistic spat erupted months ago when the Rodin Museum, which
has overseen Rodin's work bequeathed to the French government,
publicly called into question the authenticity of the casts.
In an August letter to the Toronto ****Star**** newspaper -- one of
the sponsors of the exhibit -- Rodin Museum Director Jacques Vilain
said: "The collection in question cannot be considered authentic."
Maclaren Art Center Director William Moore counters the works'
history of ownership -- or provenance -- is "clear" and that Rodin
Museum officials "have been aware of that for a long time."
Rodin Museum officials say the exhibitors should disclose the
provenance.
On Tuesday, Moore provided AFP with several declarations of
authentication, dated August 28, 2001, for some of the casts.
It appeared that most of the casts had a clear provenance, except
for one unnamed private collector.
The Paris-based museum, which is charged with protecting the
interests of Rodin's estate, also says the casts should not be
exhibited because they are of poor quality and in no part reflect
Rodin's creative vision.
Moore, while saying he "deeply respects" the museum, disputes these
claims saying the exhibit really "moves back to that sense of
originality and original thinking."
"Rodin would create a clay model which was his first conceptual
component; then he would move from clay into the plaster. The
plaster was made from a mold of the clay because the clay would
eventually fall apart.
"Then he would rework the plasters often in a number of forms. those
plasters were as close you could get to the original sense of Rodin
because he wasn't involved particularly in the making of the
bronzes, which were made by highly specialized bronzes," Moore said.
The exhibit will run until December 23 and then travel to the United
States and Asia. Tickets for which cost upwards of 20 dollars (13
dollars us).
https://www.muskokaregion.com/news/maclarens-reputation-damaged-by-rodin-scheme-says-report/article_9ae82235-acf0-544b-a25d-ec106d0aba57.html
MacLaren’s reputation damaged by
Rodin scheme, says report
By Laurie Watt Huntsville Forester
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
The MacLaren Art Centre came out a bit ahead financially in the
failed Rodin bronzes transaction, but it cost the gallery much more
in terms of its reputation, focus and ability to raise funds, city
council heard Monday night.
In April 2004, city council threw the gallery a $750,000 lifeline.
At the same time, it required the gallery to open its books to a
city committee, chaired by longtime banker Stewart McBoyle, and
discuss a tax-assisted investment scheme that was to have resulted
in long-term financial stability for the gallery through the sale of
special-edition Rodin bronzes.
The transaction failed, with the gallery never being able to secure
the bronzes. Efforts to obtain the bronzes not only drove up the
centre’s legal bills, but created a cloud of uncertainty, which
frustrated the gallery’s fund-raising efforts and distracted gallery
staff from running exhibitions, said McBoyle, who conducted 26
interviews with gallery staff, UK and American art dealers and an
art manufacturer, transporter and curator in Italy.
Names were kept confidential, he said, as the committee faced a
threat of being sued and many people interviewed over the past year
demanded confidentiality. He noted there have been “at least 25”
drafts of his report.
“The MacLaren has in its possession title documents to 510 bronzes.
It would seem some type of recovery action should be taken to get
the bronzes,” McBoyle told the media, adding the gallery can’t
afford to, because it’s in “a financial strait jacket.
“From what we have examined, we could not find anything other than
internal issues of governance, nothing that could be considered
criminal in nature. The MacLaren needs to have a proper business
plan and relook at the vision it had when it first undertook the Art
City project,” he said, adding it’s unlikely the centre will be able
to carry through on its vision to have buildings and pavilions for
art in public spaces throughout the city.
Mayor Rob Hamilton said although the gallery came out ahead - as it
acquired a Henry Moore collection (valued at $35 million) and
received 17 Rodin plasters, and $1.2 million for its building fund -
gallery officials focused their attention on obtaining the bronzes
at the expense of the gallery’s mission and other fund-raising
efforts.
“They didn’t tend to their knitting. They didn’t focus on their
other fund-raising,” the mayor said, after listening to McBoyle’s
16-page presentation.
Of the $1.2 million the gallery received, $709,159 went to reducing
the building loan held by the city. The remainder went into
operating budgets. “It got sucked up,” said Hamilton.
MacLaren board chairperson Jim Fairhead said the board has already
begun to implement several recommendations from the report.
“We have already started our strategic planning process and will
ensure that the report’s recommendations are reflected in the
official plan, which will be available to the public in September,”
he said.
“Despite the challenges of the Rodin Transaction, the report
identifies there were tangible benefits for the MAC. While we did
not achieve the financial sustainability we had hoped for, our
collection and capital campaign both benefited.”
The report also stated that MacLaren’s former director had “greater
leeway than might be expected and less than perfect communication
with the board.”
Former director William Moore could not be reached for comment as
The Advance went to press.
https://www.simcoe.com/news/barries-maclaren-can-put-rodin-story-behind-it-lawyer/article_f6f98187-dae9-57be-b577-e8be52c8f690.html
By Laurie Watt Barrie Advance
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
An Ontario Superior Court judge
has ushered the MacLaren’s Walking Man lawsuit to the door.
Ontario Superior Court of Justice Guy DiTomaso ruled last week a
$1.55-million lawsuit relating to damages to the Auguste Rodin
plaster and two other pieces came too late to go to trial.
“This is very good for the gallery. It will put the Rodin experience
behind it,” said the gallery’s lawyer, Arnold Schwisberg.
Ontario Superior Court of Justice Guy DiTomaso ruled last week a
$1.55-million lawsuit relating to damages to the Auguste Rodin
plaster and two other pieces came too late to go to trial.
“This is very good for the gallery. It will put the Rodin experience
behind it,” said the gallery’s lawyer, Arnold Schwisberg.
The Rodin story goes back to 2001. The gallery had hoped to receive
international recognition and acclaim with its Rodin exhibition. The
exhibition lost money, a long-term funding plan involving Rodin
works failed and Walking Man, with its lawsuit and its costs, kept
the wound open.
DiTomaso brought it all to an end, saying one of the pieces’ owners,
a Calgary litigator who is also an avid art collector, should have
known the Limitations Act and made his damages claim by Oct. 19,
2009.
The statement of claim was filed Nov. 19, 2009, then later amended
in 2010. The case was heard in Barrie April 3 and July 26.
DiTomaso told owner Grant Vogeli to “take immediate steps” to take
back Walking Man, which the gallery has been paying to store since
it exhibited it in the fall of 2001. The gallery estimates that cost
at $8,522.55, plus interest.
“Sadly, Walking Man is the subject of what in the art world is known
as a failed ‘art flip’ for tax purposes,” DiTomaso said. “It has
become the rejected gift that keeps on giving.
Ontario Superior Court of Justice Guy DiTomaso ruled last week a
$1.55-million lawsuit relating to damages to the Auguste Rodin
plaster and two other pieces came too late to go to trial.
“This is very good for the gallery. It will put the Rodin experience
behind it,” said the gallery’s lawyer, Arnold Schwisberg.
The Rodin story goes back to 2001. The gallery had hoped to receive
international recognition and acclaim with its Rodin exhibition. The
exhibition lost money, a long-term funding plan involving Rodin
works failed and Walking Man, with its lawsuit and its costs, kept
the wound open.
DiTomaso brought it all to an end, saying one of the pieces’ owners,
a Calgary litigator who is also an avid art collector, should have
known the Limitations Act and made his damages claim by Oct. 19,
2009.
The statement of claim was filed Nov. 19, 2009, then later amended
in 2010. The case was heard in Barrie April 3 and July 26.
DiTomaso told owner Grant Vogeli to “take immediate steps” to take
back Walking Man, which the gallery has been paying to store since
it exhibited it in the fall of 2001. The gallery estimates that cost
at $8,522.55, plus interest.
“Sadly, Walking Man is the subject of what in the art world is known
as a failed ‘art flip’ for tax purposes,” DiTomaso said. “It has
become the rejected gift that keeps on giving.
“To complicate matters, our Waking Man is a controversial figure.
Some claim it is a genuine work attributed to the famous French
sculptor Auguste Rodin and is of considerable value. Others dispute
its authenticity and provenance, which is a polite way of saying our
Walking Man is a cheap, valueless fake.
“This controversy takes on a greater significance when one considers
Walking Man’s current deteriorated and damaged condition. One thing
agreed upon is that is damaged beyond repair.”
The question of authenticity begins with the purchase of Walking Man
in 1998. A group including Vogeli purchased the piece for US$62,500.
The Vogeli group provided no receipt or authenticity certificate,
not even a cancelled cheque, to prove they purchased the piece they
later claimed was worth $450,000.
The group lent six plasters, including Walking Man, to the MacLaren
for a Rodin show, coinciding with the opening of the new gallery in
September 2001.
Because they did so, the owners qualified for an income tax credit
for six times what they paid. Later, however, the Canadian Revenue
Agency disallowed the credit, while the Musée Rodin initiated an
investigation into Walking Man, which required the piece to be
impounded and examined in Ottawa.
During the French investigation, which concluded in December, 2004,
the piece was damaged.
Because of the failure of the income tax funding plan, which
disallowed an array of donations and a plan to sell Rodin pieces,
the gallery also experienced financial troubles so severe, it sought
protection under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
While Walking Man was impounded, the MacLaren ended its loan
agreement with Vogeli and requested information, such as a shipping
address, to return it when it was released. The gallery has been
paying storage costs ever since.
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2001/oct/02/artsfeatures.arts
I think, but I'm not quite sure
who I am
2001
When is a Rodin not a Rodin? And whose decision is it anyway? Aida
Edemariam on a show that's split Canada and France
Stop someone in the street and ask them to name two famous statues.
Odds are they'll think of Michelangelo's fey David, or Rodin's
Thinker - or possibly another Rodin, The Kiss. From Plaster to
Bronze: The Sculpture of Auguste Rodin, at Toronto's Royal Ontario
Museum, is a collection comprising 70-odd plasters and bronzes,
including The Thinker and The Kiss, that is worth around £17.5m. It
has been billed as "The world's largest single collection of
plasters outside the Musée Rodin in Paris."
But are they authentic? The Musée Rodin, to which Rodin bequeathed
nearly 7,000 plasters when he died in 1917, says not. "It's a
scandal, a forgery, a delusion," says curator of statues Antoinette
Romain. Museum director Jacques Vilain has told Canadian newspapers
that this is the biggest scandal he has ever faced. "I have the
support of all France."
Invective has been flying across the Atlantic for weeks, but the
issue isn't fakes versus originals. Given that "original" Rodins are
cast, what exactly is an authentic Rodin? Who gets to decide? Rodin
himself, as much entrepreneur as sculptor, does not make the task
any easier. Born in 1840, a stonemason by trade, he didn't develop
his emotional, realistic style until he was 35, when he went to
Italy and saw the work of Michelangelo, Donatello, Ghiberti. His
next piece, The Age of Bronze (L'Age d'Airain), was so realistic
that he was accused of having cast it from a living person. Then
there was his statue of Balzac, commissioned for the Société des
Gens de Lettres. All he had to go on, wrote Kenneth Clark in
Civilisation, was that Balzac was short, fat, worked in his dressing
gown. People were horrified by the result, and he had to take the
Balzac sculpture back.
For most people, there's just one original Thinker, and it's big and
bronze. In fact, the first Thinker (Le Penseur) was small, designed
to be part of a bronze door Rodin was making for the Musée des Arts
Decoratifs. The Gates of Hell, unfinished, was inspired by The
Divine Comedy, and The Thinker was a portrait of Dante. Rodin was
fascinated by the statue and began playing around with it. The Kiss
(Le Baiser) was also part of the Gates of Hell - and there are 319
casts of that, cast between 1898 and 1819.
The figures the public saw were not necessarily touched by Rodin.
Small templates, in unpreservable clay, were used to make a mould
into which plaster was poured. Rodin distinguished between two
levels of plaster. The first from the mould was a finished,
original, independent work of art, the form in which he liked to
show his work. Visitors could order copies in marble or bronze. For
this process, Rodin, and his assistants, used other plasters, known
as foundry plasters, not meant for public consumption.
If authenticity is defined as the fewest number of removes from
Rodin's hands, then all these forms are authentic, but the first
plaster is more authentic than the first bronze, and so on. Matters
are further complicated by the fact that authenticity can be
conferred by French law, which allows a maximum of 12 original
casts. The last "original" large-form bronze Thinker was cast in
1974; any identical Thinker after that date is a reproduction. The
Musée Rodin still produces originals, from plasters yet to be cast
12 times.
No one is disputing that the Canadian bronzes are reproductions,
cast in 1999 and 2000. No one is disputing that the show - which
comes from the MacLaren Art Centre in Ontario, and is to tour the US
and Asia - includes foundry plasters. Points of contention are
quality, dating and provenance. Director of the MacLaren Centre
William Moore is confident that the plasters date from Rodin's
lifetime, pointing out that they are signed. Romain says only
posthumous plasters were signed - these date from the 1950s, and
could have been made from moulds taken from other plasters.
Some plasters are damaged, and the claim is that Rodin would have
made sure they were destroyed. Moore counters that these are
interesting in themselves, for insights they provide into how Rodin
worked, and that the exhibition will provide technical analysis of
the casting process. The Musée Rodin says it has all the original
plasters except for a few in New York's Met.
Moore provides provenances that trace the plasters back to Rodin via
his foundry. The Musée Rodin says it asked for but never received
those provenances. Nor does it recognise the expert Moore has
enlisted. Moore says he received the museum's approval a year ago.
The museum says that it was never granted. Moore accuses the museum
of being proprietorial. The museum says it is the custodian of
Rodin's image: "We think the public should not be cheated." Both
sides have thought about turning to lawyers.
What it all comes down to is value. The public has an instinctive
belief in the sanctity of art, in art as holy relic touched by one
hand only. And the art market can play on that instinct. The fewer
pieces there are, the more you can get for them. The art world lives
in horror of such operations as Bronze Direct, where small Thinkers
are available for $250. "Want a Rodin's Masterpiece for yourself?"
reads the ad. "Come to www.bronzedirect.com.
The matter ultimately returns to the question posed by the
Washington Post's chief art critic Blake Gopnik: "Do these things
look exactly like objects that Rodin would have recognised as being
by him?" The ROM is organising a symposium on November 6. They have
invited Rodin scholars from around the world, including
representatives from the Musée Rodin - which has not yet accepted
the invitation.
https://www.simcoe.com/news/maclaren-faces-1-55m-lawsuit/article_f8897a94-b56d-5d31-b336-25c2154e1306.html
MacLaren faces $1.55M lawsuit
By Barrie Advance
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
BARRIE - The ghost of Auguste Rodin has returned to haunt the
MacLaren Art Centre.
The gallery is facing $1.55 million in lawsuits relating to plasters
it borrowed to be part of a travelling exhibition.
In three separate statements of claim, the lenders accuse the
gallery of negligence and failing to properly ship the artwork –
plasters by Auguste Rodin the gallery used as part of a 2001
exhibition at the Royal Ontario Museum.
The Rodin exhibition was unprofitable, due primarily to a sudden
drop in tourism after 9/11. The event, however, put the small
gallery on the international art scene as the sculptures on display
included not only plasters, but posthumous bronzes it had
commissioned to be a long-term fundraising tool as well as a way of
placing sculptures throughout the city, to make Barrie ArtCity – a
cultural tourism destination.
The tax-assisted financing idea, however, failed.
The gallery spent time and money, albeit unsuccessfully, to obtain
all the work it commissioned and was to sell over 20 years.
In the wake of the ROM exhibition, the gallery began 2002 with a
$750,000 operating deficit. The failed Rodin Transaction, as it was
known, raised almost $1.3 million, much of which went to pay a
$2.9-million building loan from the city.
Cash-strapped, the gallery turned to the City of Barrie for not only
increased operating grants, but also to maintain its city-owned
building that was renovated and expanded in 2001. In 2004, then
executive director William Moore was released from his duties at The
MacLaren.
A City of Barrie investigative report in June 2005 cleared the
gallery of any impropriety and the city stepped in to help the
gallery with loans and increased grants. Since then, the gallery has
cut and restructured programs. Its current director Carolyn Bell
Farrell came to the gallery in July 2007.
MacLaren’s lawyer Arnold Schwisberg told The Advance the three files
are in the process of being consolidated and, once that is complete,
he will file a statement of defence.
“The centre shall be filing its single statement of defence in 30
days or less after the consolidation order is made. Until then, it
would be inappropriate for me to comment, and I would suggest that
any reportage also be deferred,” he said in an email.
“I can, however, indicate the centre believes that the claims do not
have the validity or magnitude alleged, and a fully particularized
defence shall be pursued accordingly.”
In the first court file, James and Molly Longo are asking for
$550,000 for losses relating to the piece entitled 4 Movements of
Dance. They claim they requested the gallery return their art in
June 2004, and again in the summer of 2007.
They said art consultant and former gallery director Moore, who
inspected all three pieces, reported 4 Movements of Dance had been
severely damaged. The piece was valued at $525,000. In a similar
claim, Dino Deluca and Grant Vogeli say the piece they lent the
gallery, Walking Man, is no longer of any value. It was worth
$450,000 and, according to the court file, Walking Man had major
breaks in both legs and was severely cracked.
In the third civil suit, Celia Martin, Martin Johnson and Geoffrey
Goad are asking for $500,000 for losses relating to Medium Eve. They
claim when their consultant inspected Medium Eve, valued at
$460,000, he reported she had been “severely damaged.”
In all three claims, the plaintiffs allege the gallery did not
provide required documents, such as conservation and exhibition
history, as well as condition reports, which are filed at each
venue.
The suits all claim, in the summer of 2007 the gallery said it would
arrange to ship the pieces, once it was paid to do so. However, the
loan agreement they signed stipulated the gallery would not only
provide safekeeping for the pieces, but it would insure them and
return them to the lenders.
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