Podcast | Contained in the ‘Largest artwork fraud in historical past’: what the alleged mass forgery tells us about the marketplace for First Nations artwork in Canada

This week: the extraordinary story behind what Canadian police have known as “the biggest art fraud in history”. Greater than 1,000 pretend works purporting to be by the First Nations artist Norval Morrisseau are seized and eight folks have been charged. The Artwork Newspaper’s Editor, Americas, Ben Sutton, tells the extraordinary story, involving a rock star, a tv documentary and alleged forgery rings, and what it tells us about the marketplace for First Nations artwork in Canada.
Picture: Marco Verch Professional Photographer through Flickr
A report into artists’ pay within the UK has uncovered the inordinately low sums paid to artists for his or her labour by arts organisations. We discuss to the artwork collective Industria, who wrote the report, and Julie Lomax, the CEO of a-n, The Artists’ Info Firm, which has printed the research.
Quinten Massys’s An Outdated Girl (The Ugly Duchess) (round 1513)
Bequeathed by Miss Jenny Louisa Roberta Blaker, 1947
© Picture: The Nationwide Gallery, London
And this episode’s Work of the Week is An Outdated Girl (round 1513) by the Northern Renaissance artist Quinten Massys, a portray higher generally known as The Ugly Duchess. A brand new exhibition on the Nationwide Gallery focuses on this work in its assortment, exploring its origins in a drawing by Leonardo da Vinci, and the mix of satire, folklore, humanism and misogyny from which it emerged. Emma Capron, the curator of the present, tells us extra.
• A PDF of Industria’s Structurally F–cked report might be discovered at a-n.co.uk.
• Industria’s web site is we-industria.org.
• The Ugly Duchess: Magnificence and Satire within the Renaissance, National Gallery, London, till 11 June.