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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Knoedler Gallery To Auction Its Inventory

By PATRICIA COHEN

The now-shuttered Knoedler & Co. gallery, which is the subject of several lawsuits charging it sold fakes, will sell nearly three dozen works from its remaining inventory at auction this fall.

Thirty-four pieces of art from the gallery's inventory that include works by Robert Rauschenberg, Helen Frankenthaler, Jules Olitski, Milton Avery, and Walker Evans, are scheduled to be auctioned off by Doyle New York on Nov. 13, said Harold Porcher, vice-president and director of modern contemporary art at Doyle. The pre-sale estimate of the collection ranges from $1.3 million to nearly $2 million, Mr. Porcher said, with individual pieces valued between $1,500 to $200,000.

The lots have absolutely no conne ction to the ongoing F.B.I. investigation of possible fakes sold by Knoedler, Mr. Porcher said. Three former clients of the gallery are suing it for more than $40 million, arguing that they were duped into buying forged paintings that were attributed to Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Willem de Kooning. The gallery has denied the allegations.

“I have no concerns whatsoever about this property,” Mr. Porcher said of the works to be sold at auction, an event reported earlier by the GalleristNY blog. Nonetheless, given the circumstance, he said he was personally vetting every object and documenting its provenance in detail. Mr. Porcher said it was he who had initially contacted Knoedler to ask about the possibility of auctioning some of its inventory.

“This is not a fire sale,” he said.



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