IT'S A FAKE: mother and son sentenced for forging artworks

BRITAIN: An octogenarian woman and her son were sentenced yesterday for one of the largest, longest-lasting and most diverse…

BRITAIN:An octogenarian woman and her son were sentenced yesterday for one of the largest, longest-lasting and most diverse art frauds in Britain, which involved forging paintings, sculptures, carvings and statues.

Olive Greenhalgh (82), her husband George (84) and son Shaun (46) had all pleaded guilty to making the forgeries, selling them as originals and laundering the proceeds.

The three, with the aged mother and father in wheelchairs, appeared in court in the northern English town of Bolton for sentencing.

Shaun Greenhalgh was sentenced to four years and eight months in jail, while his mother got 12 months suspended for two years. Sentencing of her husband was delayed for a medical report.

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"This family have been operating for nearly 20 years, producing and introducing a diverse range of art works," said Det Sgt Vernon Rapley, head of the UK police's art and antiques unit.

Police said the family's fraud began to unravel in February 2006 when the British Museum became suspicious of the authenticity of three stone reliefs being offered to it by the Greenhalgh family for £500,000 (€699,000).

The museum alerted the police, who began to investigate and found that the family had previously sold an Egyptian statue known as the Amarna Princess to Bolton Museum for more than £400,000. This too was found to be fake.

Police searched the family home the following month and found vast quantities of materials, including an 1892 catalogue and other documentation used as source material for various items.

Further enquiries showed that members of the family had been selling statues, paintings and antiques to galleries, museums and at auction for at least 17 years.

"Whilst numerous forged items have been recovered and every effort has been made to trace all the Greenhalgh forgeries, there can be little doubt that there are a number of forgeries still circulating within the art market," said Det Sgt Rapley.

These have included paintings by LS Lowry and Samuel Peploe and sculptures by Hepworth, Brancusi, Man Ray, Henry Moore and Otto Dix. There was also a Gauguin vase, Assyrian stone reliefs, and gold and silver items purportedly from Roman and Anglo-Saxon times.