Consultez mes autres objets!
N'oubliez pas de m'ajouter à votre liste de favoris!
Elmyr de Hory
born 'Hoffmann Elemér') (1906 – December 11, 1976)
His forgeries garnered much celebrity
from a Clifford Irving book,
Fake!, and from F for Fake (1974), a documentary essay film by Orson Welles.Eleve de Fernand Leger
né en 1905, avait grandi au sein d'une riche famille de Budapest jusqu'au divorce de ses parents.
A 18 ans, attiré par l'art et désireux de cacher son homosexualité, il avait étudié à Munich puis à Paris,
auprès de Fernand Léger, de 1926 à 1932.
Sous des noms d'emprunt Baron Elmyr von Houry, Elmyr Herzog, Louis Cassou, Baron Elmyr Hoffman,
Josef Dory, E. Raynal, Joseph Dory-Boutin, entre autres, Elmyr de Hory était un des meilleurs faussaires de son temps.
En 1967 éclata le procès Meadows, où il fut impliqué avec ses deux marchands, Legros et Lessard, les mêmes qui étaient censés gérer sa collection invisible. Tous furent inculpés, sans que l'on soit certain d'avoir mesuré la culpabilité relative d'aucun ni l'étendue générale des dégâts.
Avant de se suicider, en 1976, Elmyr de Hory reconnut avoir réalisé 80 faux tableaux pour le compte de Legros dans sa villa d'Ibiza.
C'est Elmyr de Hory, filmé par son ami François Reichenbach, qu'Orson Welles choisit en tant que personnage central de son oeuvre ultime,
F for Fake («Vérités et mensonges») en 1973.
(Michel Braudeau, «Elmyr de Hory, le caméléon», Le Monde, le 14 septembre 2004).
Nous avons le plaisir de vous présenter l un des tres rares tableaux
peint et signe du vrai nom de l artiste.
Une recherche attentive en denombre moins d une quinzaine a travers le monde.
On peut tout de meme se rendre compte de l immense talent de ce peintre qui helas
faute de reconnaissance a mis son pinceau au service de personnes douteuses comme Legros.
Delicate peinture a l huile sur toile representant:
"Portrait de femme en buste portant un grand chapeau et une rose a son corsage."
l artiste s est evertue dans cette oeuvre a reprendre tous les elements
d une oeuvre de periode fauve dans l esprit des grands maitres du temps tels que :
Matisse, Vlaminck, Derain, Marquet, Van Dongen, etc
Huile sur toile de format 61 / 50 cm , presume premiere moitiee du XX.
Signature de l artiste dans le coin superieur gauche
Etat de conservation tres propre.
Legere crasse du temps accumulee sur le vernis
Cette peinture a ete exposee lors d une Exposition faite
de juin a octobre 1988 a la Fondation Cartier.





Oeuvre ancienne restee intacte dans son etat d origine
conforme a l exacte description faite ci dessus
Elmyr de Hory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elmyr de Hory (born 'Hoffmann Elemér') (1906 – December 11, 1976) was a Hungarian-born painter and art forger
who claimed to have sold over a thousand forgeries to reputable art
galleries all over the world. His forgeries garnered much celebrity
from a Clifford Irving book, Fake!, and from F for Fake (1974), a documentary essay film by Orson Welles.
Early life
Most of the information regarding de Hory's early life comes from what he told American writer Clifford Irving, himself a fraudster, who wrote the first biography
about him. Since Elmyr's success was reliant upon his skills of
deception and invention, it would be difficult to take the facts that
he told about his own life at face value, as Clifford Irving himself
admitted. Elmyr claimed that he was born into an aristocratic family,
that his father was an Austro-Hungarian ambassador and that his mother came from a family of bankers.
However, subsequent investigation has suggested that Elmyr's childhood
was, more likely, of an ordinary, middle class variety. His parents
left him to the care of various governesses and were divorced when
Elmyr was sixteen.
Elmyr moved to Budapest, Hungary to study. At 18, he joined the Akademie Heinmann art school in Munich, Germany to study classical painting. In 1926 he moved to Paris, and enrolled in the Académie la Grande Chaumière, where he studied under Fernand Léger and became accustomed to fine living.
Shortly after his return to Hungary, he became involved with a
British journalist and suspected spy. This friendship landed him in a Transylvanian prison for political dissidents in the Carpathian Mountains. During this time, de Hory befriended the prison camp officer by painting his portrait. Later, during the Second World War, de Hory was released.
Within a year, de Hory was back in jail, this time imprisoned in a German concentration camp for being both a Jew and a homosexual
(while his homosexuality was proven over time, investigation into his
past has shown the likelihood that Elmyr was not Jewish, but instead
was christened as a Calvinist). He was severely beaten and was transferred to a Berlin
prison hospital, where he escaped and later slipped back into Hungary.
It was there he learned that his parents had been killed and their
estate confiscated. With his remaining money de Hory bribed his way back into France, where he tried to earn his living by painting.
Life as a forger
On arriving in Paris de Hory attempted to make an honest living as
an artist, but soon discovered that he had an uncanny ability to copy
the works of noted painters. So good were his copies that many of his
friends believed them to be genuine; in 1946 de Hory sold a
reproduction of a Picasso to a British
friend who took it for an original. He began to sell his Picasso
reproductions to art galleries, claiming that they were what remained
of his family's estate. Galleries took the paintings and paid de Hory
the equivalent of $100 to $400 per painting. Elmyr was always unique
among art forgers in that, rather than attempting to copy existing
works by celebrated artists, he only painted original works in their
style, which made the forgeries much harder to detect.
That same year de Hory formed a partnership with Jacques Chamberlin, who would later become his art dealer. They toured Europe and South America
selling the forgeries until de Hory discovered that, although they were
supposed to share the profits equally, Chamberlin had kept most of the
money. He ended the relationship and resumed the tour alone. In 1947 de
Hory visited the United States on a three-month visa and decided to stay there, moving between New York City and Los Angeles.
Occasionally, throughout his career, de Hory attempted to stop
making forgeries and create original artwork, but could never find a
market for his work, always returning to the lucrative clandestine
activity. De Hory eventually expanded his forgeries to include works by
Matisse, Modigliani and Renoir. Because some of the galleries de Hory had sold his forgeries to were becoming suspicious, he began to use pseudonyms, and to sell his work by mail order. Some of de Hory's many pseudonyms included Louis Cassou, Joseph Dory, Joseph Dory-Boutin, Elmyr Herzog, Elmyr Hoffman and E. Raynal.
During the 1950s, de Hory settled in Miami,
continuing to sell his forgeries through the mail and studying the
styles and techniques of other master painters in order to imitate
their works. In 1955 one of his Matisse forgeries was sold to the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University; soon thereafter, authorities discovered it was a fake and launched an investigation.
Making a business of forgery
In 1955 de Hory sold several forgeries to Chicago art dealer Joseph
W. Faulkner, who later discovered they were fakes. Faulkner pressed
charges against de Hory and initiated a federal lawsuit against him,
alleging mail and telephone fraud. De Hory later moved to Mexico City,
where he was briefly detained and questioned by the police, not for his
artistic endeavors, but regarding his connection to a suspect in the
murder of a British man, whom de Hory claimed he had never met. When
the Mexican police attempted to extort
money from him, de Hory hired a lawyer who also attempted to extort
money from him, by charging exorbitant legal fees. de Hory paid the
lawyer with one of his forgeries and returned to the USA.
On his return, de Hory discovered that his paintings were fetching
fantastically high prices at several art galleries, and was incensed
that the galleries had only paid him a fraction of what they thought
the paintings were worth. Further compounding de Hory's plight was that
the manner of his forgeries had become recognizable, forcing him to
sell his fake lithographs
door-to-door to make a living. While on a trip to Washington DC, de
Hory began to suffer from depression and attempted suicide by overdose
of sleeping pills. His stomach was pumped, and after a stay in the
hospital, de Hory convalesced in New York City, helped by an
enterprising young man, Fernand Legros, who eventually became de Hory's primary dealer. Their stormy association lasted until 1967.
Legros accompanied de Hory back to Miami where he continued to
regain his health. Imprudently taking Legros into his confidence, the
other man quickly recognized an opportunity and importuned the artist
to let him sell his work in exchange for a 40% cut of the profits, with
Legros assuming all the risks inherent in the sale of forgeries. With
Legros, de Hory again toured the United States. In time, Legros
demanded his cut be increased to 50%, when, in reality, Legros was
already keeping much of the profit. On one of these trips Legros met
Real Lessard, a French-Canadian,
who would later become his lover. The two had a volatile relationship,
and in 1959 de Hory decided to leave the two and return to Europe.
In Paris, de Hory unexpectedly ran into Legros. De Hory revealed to
him that some of his forgeries were still back in New York. Legros
devised a plan to steal the paintings and sell them, making a name for
himself and his art gallery in the process. Later that year, de Hory
decided to resume his partnership with Legros. Legros and Lessard would
continue to sell de Hory's work, and agreed to pay him a flat fee of
$400 a month.
In 1962, de Hory moved to the Spanish island of Ibiza,
while Legros and Lessard kept up the business of selling his paintings
for large amounts of money from Paris. Many times they would forget to
send de Hory his small monthly allowance. After several instances of
this, Legros built de Hory a home in Ibiza to placate him.
Elmyr always denied that he had ever signed any of his forgeries
with the name of the artist whom he was imitating. This is an important
legal matter, since painting in the style of an artist is not a crime -
only signing a painting with another artist's name makes it a forgery.
This may be true, as Legros may have signed the paintings with the
false names.
Unmasking the forger
In 1964, now 58-years old, de Hory began to tire of the forgery
business, and soon his work began to suffer. Consequently, many art
experts began noticing that the paintings they were receiving were
forgeries. Some of the galleries examining de Hory's work alerted Interpol, and the police were soon on the trail of Legros and Lessard. Legros sent de Hory to Australia for a year, to keep him out of the eye of the investigation.
By 1966, more of de Hory's paintings were being revealed as forgeries; one man in particular, Texas oil magnate Algur H. Meadows,
to whom Legros had sold 56 forged paintings, was so outraged to learn
that most of his collection was forgeries, that he demanded the arrest
and prosecution of Legros. Angered, Legros decided to hide from the
police at de Hory's house on Ibiza, where he asserted ownership, and
threatened to evict de Hory. Coupled with this and with Legros'
increasingly violent mood swings, de Hory decided to leave Ibiza.
Legros and Lessard were apprehended soon thereafter, imprisoned on
charges of check fraud.
Elmyr continued to elude the police for some time, but, tired of
life in exile, decided to move back to Ibiza to accept his fate. In
August 1968, a Spanish court convicted him of the crimes of
homosexuality and of consorting with criminals, sentencing him to 2
months in prison. He was never directly charged with forgery, because
the court could not prove that he had ever created any forgeries on
Spanish soil. He was released in October 1968 and expelled from Spain.
Death and legacy
One year following his release, de Hory returned to Ibiza, by then a celebrity. He told his story to Clifford Irving who wrote the biography: Fake! The Story of Elmyr de Hory the Greatest Art Forger of Our Time. Soon thereafter, Irving created his own forgery: a fake auto-biography of Howard Hughes. Elmyr appeared in several television interviews, and was featured with Irving in Orson Welles' free-form documentary, F for Fake
(1974). In Welles' film, Elmyr questioned what it was that made his
forgeries inferior to the actual paintings created by the artists he
imitated, particularly since they had fooled so many experts, and were
always appreciated when it was believed that they were genuine.
During the early 1970s, de Hory again decided to try his hand at
painting, hoping to exploit his new-found fame: this time, he would
sell his own, original work. While he had gained some recognition in
the art world he made little profit, and he soon learned that French
authorities were attempting to extradite him to stand trial on fraud charges. This took quite some time, however, as Spain and France had no extradition treaty at that time.
On December 11, 1976, Elmyr de Hory's live-in bodyguard (part of
Elmyr's self-created mythos was his belief that he had enemies who
wished to murder him) and companion, Mark Forgy,
informed him that the Spanish government had, after lengthy
negotiation, agreed to turn Elmyr over to the French authorities.
Shortly thereafter, Forgy found Elmyr near death in their home. He had
taken an overdose of sleeping pills,
and within minutes of being discovered, died in Forgy's arms. Clifford
Irving has expressed doubts about Elmyr's death, claiming that he may
have faked his own suicide in order to escape extradition, but Forgy
has dismissed this theory.
Following his death, de Hory's paintings became valuable
collectibles. In fact, his paintings had become so popular that forged
de Horys began to appear on the market.
In popular culture
References