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Art fraud.


Online auctions have helped boost line art sales, but the $2.3 million legal judgment won last month by a noted Japanese pop artist also highlighted some of the hazards involved.

Hajime Sorayama This article or section has multiple issues:
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, known for his erotic and futuristic art, won the judgment last month--including $1 million in punitive damages--against Beverly Hills art publisher Robert Bane BANE. This word was formerly used to signify a malefactor. Bract. 1. 2, t. 8, c. 1.  and his company, Robert Bane Ltd. Inc. Bane failed to account for the proceeds from sales of 33 original Sorayama paintings and illegal, cut-rate dumping of scores of reproductions.

For Sorayama, whose work includes a number of futuristic pin-up illustrations of women, it meant that once closely controlled limited edition reproductions of his paintings were being sold lot $100 to $200 online, rather than the thousands of dollars they might have commanded.

"It can be a big problem for artists whose work is well known: you have to be very wary," said Bert Green, who owns an art gallery in downtown Los Angeles Downtown Los Angeles is the central business district of Los Angeles, California, located close to the geographic center of the metropolitan area. The sprawling, multi-centered megacity is such that its downtown core is often considered just another district like Hollywood or . "To willfully willfully adv. referring to doing something intentionally, purposefully and stubbornly. Examples: "He drove the car willfully into the crowd on the sidewalk." "She willfully left the dangerous substances on the property." (See: willful)  flood the market with reproductions is unconscionable Unusually harsh and shocking to the conscience; that which is so grossly unfair that a court will proscribe it.

When a court uses the word unconscionable to describe conduct, it means that the conduct does not conform to the dictates of conscience.
, because it's incredibly damaging to the market, the artist and legitimate collectors of the work."

Sorayama, who designed the popular Aibo robotic dog for Sony Corp., and whose work is in the Smithsonian and New York's Museum of Modern Art, was tipped off along with his agent to the fraud after collectors complained through the artist's Web site. The artist discovered numerous online listings for Sorayama limited editions at up to 90 percent off the work's list price on eBay.

"It basically shot the market for Sorayama reproductions, because it's impossible to achieve sustained value and had a derivative effect derivative effect,
n one of the physiologic doctrines used in hydrotherapy to modify blood circulation. The ap-plication of heat increases the blood flow to an area while a cold application decreases the blood flow.
 on original market," said Paul Laurin of Weiner & Laurin LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol , the law firm representing Sorayama.

It was around 2002, after Bane's third exclusive publishing agreement with Sorayama expired (the first written deal was in 1994), that the bulk of the dumping took place. The market for Sorayama originals has recovered over the past six months. Laurin said, though the market for the limited-edition reproductions will take longer to come back.

Staff reporter Anne Riley-Katz can be reached at ariley-katz@labusinessjournal.com or at (323) 549-5225, ext. 225.
COPYRIGHT 2007 CBJ, L.P.
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Title Annotation:MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT
Author:Riley-Katz, Anne
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:Oct 1, 2007
Words:355
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