Know-your-client guidelines will not be simply bureaucratic containers to tick. In some artwork commerce transactions they are often the distinction between sniffing out a fraudster and dropping possession of, say, an early Gustave Courbet portray.
The London gallery proprietor Patrick Matthiesen realized this the arduous manner. He had bought an 1844 oil portray by Courbet, Mom and Little one on a Hammock, at a French public sale home in 2015 and was trying to promote it. In 2023, he consigned the portray to the Nicholas Corridor Gallery in New York, which specialises in Outdated Grasp works, to indicate it at the Tefaf Maastricht honest of that 12 months, and the portray was listed on the market for $650,000. It didn’t promote, however the Nicholas Corridor Gallery was enthusiastic about displaying the image in New York. That may have been a greater plan than what ended up transpiring.
“I used to be launched to a Thomas Doyle, whom I by no means had heard of and who simply appeared out of the woodwork by means of an e-mail,” Matthiesen tells The Artwork Newspaper. Doyle claimed that he was within the US Air Power “and was a ‘High Gun’. He additionally mentioned that he was a authorities contractor, and he additionally informed me that he dabbled in artwork [dealing].” Based on Matthiesen, Doyle mentioned that his mom was concerned within the artwork world, making reference to the distinguished public sale home Doyle Auctions, including that “his household had a considerable belief that invested in artwork”. Matthiesen was informed that whereas Doyle had been lower out of that household belief for unspecified causes, he nonetheless had entry to necessary artwork.
Matthiesen had executed some checking up on Doyle, who used the identify “A.J. Doyle”, reasonably than Thomas Doyle. Thomas Doyle had 11 convictions for fraud, whereas A.J. Doyle was not recognized. Matthiesen says he contacted folks at main public sale homes who informed him that there was a Doyle within the artwork world. One Thomas Doyle’s convictions was for stealing a bronze Edgar Degas statue of a dancer in 2007, for which he spent two years in jail. “All of it seems to be a bit informal,” says Julian Radcliffe, the chairman of the London-based Artwork Loss Register, which tracks stolen artistic endeavors.
Pink flags may need been waving, however Matthiesen grew to become satisfied that Doyle was on the up-and-up primarily based on works that he despatched for the London seller to look at. There have been two El Grecos (“not in ok situation for me to wish to deal with”, Matthiesen recollects), a Peter Paul Rubens and a drawing that Doyle claimed to be by Michelangelo—“Very stunning, however I believed, and I had affirmation of this by a curator on the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, that it really had been drawn by one among Michelangelo’s assistants,” Matthiesen says. The London seller was impressed nonetheless. “I believed within the man, as a result of he produced actual issues.”
In 2024, Doyle provided to accomplice with Matthiesen in promoting a portray by Jean Baptiste-Camille Corot, however the seller was leery due to so many pretend Corots available on the market. Unbeknownst to Matthiesen, Doyle had been sued and arrested in 2010 for allegedly making an attempt to rearrange a fraudulent buy of a Corot portray. Doyle pleaded responsible to 1 rely of wire fraud and was sentenced to 6 years in jail. At his sentencing, in response to The New York Instances, the choose informed Doyle: “You’re a profession felony by any definition of the time period.”
Doyle claimed that he knew of a purchaser for the gallery’s Courbet and requested Matthiesen if he may borrow the portray to indicate this particular person, brokering a sale. With out ever as soon as assembly Doyle in particular person, Matthiesen despatched him the work and by no means noticed it once more.
“Patrick requested us to launch it to Mr Doyle, which we did,” says Nicholas Corridor. “It was actually picked up by a consultant” for Doyle, Corridor says, including that “Patrick subsequently informed me that Mr Doyle had certainly bought it for him”.
For his half, Matthiesen referred to as Doyle “a sort of Walter Mitty”, referring to the character in a James Thurber quick story who claims experience in areas he solely goals of—“very convincing”.
Doyle claimed that the unnamed purchaser for the Courbet was prepared to pay $550,000 for it, an quantity agreeable to Matthiesen. Doyle had a accomplice on this, the seller Shalva Sarukhanishvili, who took cost of promoting the portray to the Jill Newhouse Gallery in New York Metropolis for $115,000, and that gallery promptly resold the work to the famous artwork collector and Bruce Springsteen enterprise supervisor Jon Landau for $125,000. For each gross sales, a false provenance was supplied to the 2 patrons, indicating that Doyle had actually been the portray’s proprietor.
No cash was ever turned over to the Matthiesen Gallery and, in an e-mail dated 4 March 2025, Doyle acknowledged to the London seller that he had been lied to, recommending that Matthiesen contact Sarukhanishvili in an effort to get both the portray again or his cash paid for it. Matthiesen tried to contact Sarukhanishvili however obtained no response.
On 14 November, the 68-year-old Doyle was arrested by brokers from the FBI’s Artwork Crime Staff and charged with one rely of wire fraud, which carries a most jail time period of 20 years. The case is being dealt with by the Workplace’s Illicit Finance and Cash Laundering Unit. Sarukhanishvili can be being sought by legislation enforcement brokers.
Remaining, nonetheless, is a lawsuit filed in late September in a New York district courtroom by Matthiesen towards Doyle, Sarukhanishvili, the Jill Newhouse Gallery and Landau. The London seller claims that neither Doyle, Sarukhanishvili nor the Jill Newhouse Gallery had the proper to consign or promote the Courbet. The grievance alleges that “Newhouse is an lively participant within the artwork market who knew, or ought to have recognized, that Matthiesen… had been providing the portray for $650,000 or extra for a number of years”, and that “Landau knew or ought to have recognized that Newhouse lacked the flexibility to go good title to the Portray, as a result of Landau beforehand seen the portray a number of instances at a number of places apart from with Newhouse. Every time he was conscious that its retail value was $650,000 or extra.”
Steven Schindler, a New York Metropolis lawyer representing Matthiesen, says that each Newhouse and Landau “ought to have recognized that this deal was too good to be true”. An inexpensive quantity of analysis, he claimed, would have made evident that one thing was mistaken on this sale, though he added that “I’ve actually seen folks do much less due diligence” within the artwork commerce. The lawsuit seeks both the return of the portray to Matthiesen or the worth of the work, positioned at $550,000.
Jill Newhouse and her lawyer, Amelia Ok. Brankov, declined to remark to The Artwork Newspaper whereas the case was ongoing.
Jonathan Kraut, a lawyer representing Landau, tells The Artwork Newspaper: “Primarily based on relevant legislation, Jon Landau is the rightful proprietor of that portray.”
The ethical Radcliffe attracts from this episode is that “the artwork world wants a database of people that have defrauded somebody, who haven’t paid their money owed or shouldn’t be traded with. A database like that may be a significant deterrent to those sorts of crimes, getting the artwork commerce nearer to the requirements of different industries, like banking and insurance coverage.”
