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An art gallery in Argentina is displaying some of the world’s most infamous forgeries

afp-gallery-of-fake-paintings-opens-in-argentinaAFP From Business Insider

Forged paintings are exhibited at the Argentine Finance Ministry in Buenos Aires on April 26, 2016, in a bid to alert potential buyers of art and create awareness of the illegal trafficking of cultural goods

Buenos Aires (AFP) – The paintings in Buenos Aires’ newest gallery may look like the work of great artists, but they are actually rip-offs — and the exhibition’s organizers want you to know it.

One of the works doesn’t even look the part — it is supposed to be a masterpiece by the late Argentine painter Antonio Berni, but the main figure’s head is cut off by the frame.

The 40 canvases on display at the exhibition in the Argentine capital were seized in a raid organized by cross-border police agency Interpol on a band of forgers.

Police got hold of 240 works overall, fake versions of works by renowned South American artists, ready to be sold complete with fake certification.

“Some of the copies are clumsily executed, but others are very good,” said the show’s curator Mario Naranjo, an official from the Argentine finance ministry.

He says they are worth $600,000 overall — a fraction of the market, but an important example for raising awareness of art fraud.

“This kind of crime makes millions of dollars. It is considered the biggest racket in the world after arms and drug-trafficking,” Naranjo said.

Some of the works have been faked in minute detail, with the forgers even adding holes to make the canvas look moth-eaten.

The exhibition runs until mid-May at the finance ministry in Buenos Aires, after which the works will be returned to the court handling the case against the forgers and eventually destroyed.

IMAGE: Forged paintings are exhibited at the Argentine Finance Ministry in Buenos Aires on April 26, 2016, in a bid to alert potential buyers of art and create awareness of the illegal trafficking of cultural goods © AFP Eitan Abramovich

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