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Italian painter arrested as investigations continue in Old Master forgery scandal

Lino Frongia is suspected of producing the fakes that sold for millions of euros

Vincent Noce
28 June 2023
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The Venus purportedly by Cranach was the first painting revealed to be a forgery © Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

The Venus purportedly by Cranach was the first painting revealed to be a forgery © Liechtenstein. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna

Pasquale Frongia, the 65-year-old painter who investigators believe is the artist who executed a spectacular series of alleged Old Master forgeries, was arrested by Carabinieri on Monday 26 June in his hometown in the province of Reggio Emilia in northern Italy, according to local press reports.

A legal source in Paris says the arrest of Frongia, who goes by the nickname of Lino, follows a new European warrant issued by the French investigating judge Aude Buresi. She first launched the warrant in 2019, but the court of Bologna, Italy, ruled that the charges against Frongia were inconsistent and decided against the painter’s transfer to France.

In December 2022, the dealer and collector Giuliano Ruffini, the suspected mastermind behind the sale of numerous fakes for millions of euros, was brought from Reggio Emilia to Paris, where he was charged for gang fraud and money laundering.

Ruffini, 78, was granted €1m bail and placed under house arrest with electronic surveillance in Paris. His son Mathieu, who was interviewed by the investigators and the judge last May, was also charged with money laundering. He was authorised to go back to Italy, with bail fixed at €200,000.

The three men have always denied any wrongdoing. Giuliano Ruffini says experts, curators and dealers were responsible for attributing the paintings to great masters such as Brueghel, Cranach, Parmigianino, Frans Hals, Guido Reni or Bronzino—not him. He has also challenged the forensic expertise that concluded that the paintings are recent fakes.

Mathieu Ruffini has denied having any knowledge of his father’s business. However, according to legal files made public in Italy and France, the investigation shows that he made several transfers to Lino Frongia, including a $740,000 payment from a UBS Swiss account in 2007. Before the court of Bologna, Frongia said these were payments for sales and restorations he had undertaken for Giuliano Ruffini.

Art crimeOld MastersGiuliano Ruffini
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