An Art Dealer in Milan Has Been Convicted of Trying to Sell a Forged Josef Albers Painting

The director of the Josef Albers Foundation deemed the painting a fake in 2016.

A similar work from Josef Albers's series, Homage to the Square (1971) © 2017 The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation. Courtesy David Zwirner, New York/London.

An Italian art dealer has been convicted of attempting to sell a forged Josef Albers square painting for €320,000 ($387,000). 

The Court of Milan found Gabriele Seno guilty in September and issued him a suspended prison sentence of one year and eight months, plus €4,000 ($4,800) in fines. Seno argued that he had inherited the painting from his father, who purchased it in 1986, and that the certificate of authenticity had been lost. 

He is now appealing the ruling. Seno’s lawyer did not respond to a request for comment. 

The artwork in question, a purported “Study for Homage to the Square” painting in yellow and orange, was deemed a fake by Nicholas Fox Weber, executive director of the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation.

“Mr. Weber examined the painting and immediately noticed that it was an imitation,” reads the judge’s ruling. Tipping him off was the “technique of application of color and to the artist’s signature on the painting, apparently referable to Albers, but unquestionably apocryphal to his expert eye,” the ruling continues.  

Josef and Anni Albers at Black Mountain College in 1949.Photo: Theodore Dreier via Josef & Anni Albers Foundation

Josef and Anni Albers at Black Mountain College in 1949. Photo: Theodore Dreier via Josef and Anni Albers Foundation.

Jeannette Redensek, an art historian and director of Josef Albers’s catalogue raisonné, also affirmed Webers’s belief at the time. She suspected that the painting belonged to a group of Albers forgeries that first appeared on the market in the 1980s.

Indeed, counterfeits have long been a problem for the Albers Foundation, which may not come as a surprise given the deceptive simplicity of Albers’s squares-in-squares paintings. 

“People think they are easy to forge as essentially they are three squares, but in fact [forgeries] are quite recognizable,” Weber recently told the Financial Times, adding that the same tell-tale clues that gave away Seno’s alleged forgery—that is, the location of the signature and the way the paint was applied—tend to dog most facsimiles.

“The main point here is that you cannot rely on a catalogue before buying an authentic Albers,” Dario Jucker, an Italian lawyer who represented the Albers foundation in the case, tells Artnet News. ”You need a direct examination and a certificate from the foundation.”


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