Driven to Abstraction: A Panel Discussion on Art & Authenticity in Practice
Event Information
About this Event
The free virtual documentary screening has ended. However, the panel will take place on December 8 from 7-8PM—you can still register for the panel even if you missed the screening. The documentary can be rented for $12 on Grasshopper Film.
About the panel: This panel brings together experts in art law, documentary film, and provenance research to discuss Driven to Abstraction (2020) and the important questions that it raises about the value of authenticity, race and criminal justice, and cultural authority. In addition to participating in a guided conversation, the panelists—including an expert featured in the film—will also address audience questions, which may be submitted during the event or in advance. Moderated by Dr. Nika Elder (Art History, American University) and featuring panelists Christine Farley (Professor of Law and Faculty Director, Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property, American University Washington College of Law), Leena Jayaswal (Professor, School of Communication, American University), and Victoria Sears Goldman (Director, Art Risk Advisory Practice, K2 Intelligence).
About the documentary: Driven to Abstraction unravels a mutating tale of self-delusion, greed, and fraud— the $80 million forgery scandal that rocked the art world and brought down Knoedler, New York City’s oldest and most venerable gallery. Was the gallery’s esteemed director the victim of a con artist who showed up with an endless treasure trove of previously unseen abstract expressionist masterpieces? Or did she eventually suspect they were fakes, yet continue to sell them for millions of dollars for fifteen years? Whatever the truth, two women from very different worlds crossed paths in what would become the greatest hoax ever of Modern American Art.
This program is presented in conjunction with the AU Museum's virtual fall exhibition Art and Authenticity in the Age of Fake News, which assembles 30 paintings, photographs, and prints from the AU Museum Collection that span the long twentieth century and test the boundaries of “authenticity.” Art and Authenticity is part of our virtual fall series "Contested Space," which presents programming surrounding November's presidential election.