House Republicans Pressure Hunter Biden’s Art Dealer to Turn Over Sales Records and Appear Before a Committee

“Your arrangement with Hunter Biden raises serious ethics concerns,” Representative James Comer wrote in a message to Biden’s dealer.

Hunter Biden with his father, Vice President Joe Biden, at the World Food Program USA's Annual McGovern-Dole Leadership Award Ceremony on April 12, 2016 in Washington, DC. Photo by Teresa Kroeger/Getty Images for World Food Program USA.

Hunter Biden’s nascent art career is again at the center of lawmakers’ attention as the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability continues its investigation into the president’s family. 

Yesterday, the committee’s chairman, Republican representative James Comer of Kentucky, sent a letter to Biden’s New York art dealer, Georges Bergès, demanding information about the artist’s sales. 

“Your arrangement with Hunter Biden raises serious ethics concerns and calls into question whether the Biden family is again selling access and influence,” Comer said in the missive. “Despite being a novice artist, Hunter Biden received exorbitant amounts of money selling his artwork, the buyers’ identities remain unknown, and you appear to be the sole record keeper of these lucrative transactions.”

Comer cited recent articles around Biden’s December show at Bergès’s gallery, wherein the dealer said that prices for the artist’s work ranged from $55,000 to $225,000

“It is concerning that President Biden’s son is the recipient of anonymous, high-dollar transactions—potentially from foreign buyers—with no accountability or oversight (other than you),” the letter went on. “The American people deserve transparency regarding certain details about Hunter Biden’s expensive art transactions.”

Comer claimed that the committee previously requested information from the gallery and that Bergès “did not respond to these requests.” 

Now the congressman is urging Bergès to sit for a transcribed interview with the committee and has asked that he provide a series of documents, including contracts and sales figures; the ethics guidelines around Biden’s work that the dealer reportedly established with the White House in 2021; and all communications between the gallery, Hunter Biden, and Joe Biden’s office.

When reached by Artnet News, Bergès said, “at the moment I cannot comment…but know that my singular focus has always been, and will continue to be, the integrity of our artists and the privacy of our art collectors.”

“I represent Hunter Biden because I feel that not only his art merits my representation, but because his personal narrative, which gives birth to his art, is very much needed in the world,” the dealer continued. “His is a story of perseverance; Hunter’s story reflects what I believe is the beauty of humanity, judged not by the fall, but by having the strength to rise up, by having the character required to change and the courage to do it.”

“I know that there’s a lot of politics involved at the moment which is a shame because his work is not only good it’s important,” Berges said. “I take art seriously and believe that artists can have a real impact on the world and at this moment we need it. Hunter Biden, through his art, is doing this and will impact culture and our discourse in a way I have always believed art should.”

The gallerist concluded by noting that his response to Congressman Comer “will come soon.”

Comer isn’t the only one seeking profit figures from the gallerist and his headline-grabbing artist. According to court documents, Biden’s former girlfriend Lunden Roberts has asked for “detailed information” about his art sales as part of an ongoing battle over child support payments.


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