Art Auctions on Cruise Ships
Lead to Anger, Accusations and Lawsuits
By Jori Finkel
Published: July 16, 2008
The New York Times
When most people think of art auctions, they think of Christies
or Sothebys in New York or London, not a cruise ship. But over the
last two decades, auctioning fine art on cruises, often to
first-time bidders who have never met a reserve or inspected a provenance,
has become big business.
The biggest player by far, with more than $300 million
in annual revenue and nearly 300,000 artworks sold each year, is Park
West Gallery, based in Southfield, Mich. It handles such a high volume
of art sales at sea that it bills itself as the worlds largest
art dealer.
Park West sells art on the Royal Caribbean, Celebrity,
Norwegian, Carnival, Disney, Holland America, Regent and Oceania lines.
(Princess runs its own auctions in-house.)
For the cruise-ship companies, Park Wests auctions
have become a revenue source like any other concession. For the passengers
the auctions are a popular form of onboard entertainment, like gambling
or shopping or catching the shows.
Yet some Park West customers say they did not get what
they bargained for.
One is Luis Maldonado, a businessman from the La Jolla
section of San Diego with interests in finance and construction and a
penchant for Latin American art. He was touring the Mediterranean with
his wife, Karina, on the Regent Seven Seas Voyager in November 2006 when
they decided to stop by the Park West art auction promoted onboard.
He was surprised to find artworks by Picasso and Rembrandt
in the auction area, a lounge near the casino, where they were greeted
with Champagne. He gravitated toward the Picassos.
There, he said, the auctioneer talked up two museum-quality
Picasso prints appraised at more than $35,000 each and a trilogy of Salvador
Dalí prints valued at $35,000 as a set. Mr. Maldonado said the
auctioneer described the works as good investments, explaining
that they were being offered at 40 percent off their appraised value,
with no sales tax.
When he asked about the nature of Park West, he said he
was told it was on par with Christies and Sothebys.
It was easy to make the leap. After all, he thought, it
was a prestigious cruise, and he had gotten discounts on good wines onboard
before. He started bidding, with little competition from the room, and
stopped at several thousand dollars below Park Wests appraised value
on each. He received an invoice marked All sales are final.
It was only after Mr. Maldonado landed back in California
that he did some research on his purchases. Including the buyers
premium, he had paid $24,265 for a 1964 Clown print by Picasso.
He found that Sothebys had sold the exact same print (also numbered
132 of 200) in London for about $6,150 in 2004.
In addition, he had paid $31,110 for a 1968 print, Le
Clown by Picasso; Artprice.com, an online art database, showed it
going for about $5,000.
Perhaps most disturbing, he learned from The Official
Catalog of the Graphic Works of Salvador Dalí, by the Dalí
archivist Albert Field, that the pencil signatures on Mr. Maldonados
prints from Dalís Divine Comedy series (prints
without a signature in the woodblock itself) put them in Mr. Fields
column of unacceptable prints.
Since Dalí did not sign any of these prints
in black pencil, a pencil signature on one must be a forgery, Mr.
Field wrote.
It was very upsetting, Mr. Maldonado said.
Im not mad about spending $73,000. Im mad about spending
$73,000 for works that I was told are worth more than $100,000 and are
probably worth $10,000, if theyre even real.
He said he contacted Park West dozens of times
requesting a refund, beginning in early 2007 with multiple e-mail messages
to the auctioneer, who responded that all sales were final. More recently,
he has pressed Park Wests customer service department for a full
refund, without success.
Reached by phone in Michigan, Albert Scaglione, the founder
of Park West, said he stood by the companys certificates of authenticity
and its appraisals. I am absolutely confident that if we had the
opportunity to give Mr. Maldonado the history of our pricing, he would
have a different view, Mr. Scaglione said on Monday.
But about two hours after The New York Times asked Mr.
Scaglione about Mr. Maldonados case, Park West phoned Mr. Maldonado
to offer him a full refund.
It may take more effort to satisfy other customers. In
April a Florida resident and a California resident filed class action
lawsuits against Park West that could potentially cover tens of thousands
of residents of those states.
They have accused the company of misrepresenting the value of its artwork
and are seeking unspecified damages for unfair trade practices, breach
of contract and unjust enrichment.
Appraisals in Question
While overcharging for a product is not in itself illegal,
misrepresenting the goods sold can be. The plaintiffs central argument
hinges on Park Wests description of its appraisals.
On the back of Park West invoices, issued on the ship,
the appraised value is described as the price a client would have
to pay to replace the work through a reputable retail art gallery.
Yet on the Park West appraisals themselves, shipped to buyers along with
their artwork, the appraised value refers to the current Park West
Gallery retail replacement price.
A lawyer for the plaintiffs in both states, Shawn Khorrami
in Los Angeles, said there was a big difference between the two. Its
the difference between saying, My house is worth $50 million because
thats what the market would pay for it, and, My house
is worth $50 million because I say so, he said.
But a lawyer for Park West, Robert Burlington of Miami,
emphasized that the courts have not yet certified the proposed classes
in the suits and might not ever do so. He mentioned a 2001 complaint filed
in New Jersey against Park West, accusing it of chandelier bidding (the
art market term for plucking a bid from thin air), that was kicked around
the courts for years before the class was denied certification, partly
because the purchases at issue took place at sea.
As for sales pitches by auctioneers, Mr. Burlington pointed
to language in the invoice saying that no verbal agreements or representations
shall be of any force of effect unless set forth in writing in this invoice.
Mr. Scaglione called the class action suits groundless.
Weve got over a million clients and we make an effort to satisfy
every one of them, he said. Sometimes you have disingenuous
people who buy things for not good reasons, and we get set up.
With our size, its unfortunate weve
now become a target, he added.
Still, other Park West customers who are not involved
in the class action suits have made similar allegations of misrepresentation
of value.
Dr. Venkatraman Srinivasan, a Pittsburgh cardiologist,
has published an account of his experience with Park West at the Web site
FineArtRegistry.com. He said he paid around $30,000 for Better World,
by Peter Max, while on a Celebrity cruise from Vancouver, British Columbia,
to Anchorage last August.
According to his account, he was told that it was an original
painting worth about $50,000 and was dismayed to discover, when back on
terra firma, that variations from the same series were priced as low as
$3,000 or $4,000. (Dr. Srinivasan declined to be interviewed for this
article because of a confidentiality agreement he signed to obtain a refund
from Park West.)
Debra and Timothy Vruble, a couple from Elgin, Ill., who
both work in manufacturing engineering, took a Royal Caribbean cruise
to the Bahamas in October 2006. Onboard they bought a set of three Divine
Comedy prints by Dalí from Park West for $19,468.
An Auctioneers Advice
The auctioneer told us we could walk off the boat
and sell them for 20 percent more, and they would go up 20 percent a year,
Mrs. Vruble said. Back home, an outside appraisal for the resale value
of one of the three prints came in at $850 to $1,000.
Mrs. Vruble said she had gone to great lengths to obtain
a refund over the last 18 months, making dozens of calls and
writing several letters to Park West customer service representatives
and managers.
Asked on Monday about her complaint, Mr. Scaglione said
that any auctioneer who said such things would be an auctioneer
with us no longer. Later that afternoon Mrs. Vruble said she received
a call out of the blue from Mr. Shapiro, Park Wests
gallery director, offering a refund. (She got the call about a refund
five minutes after Mr. Maldonado did; Mr. Shapiro confirmed later by e-mail
that a refund is in process and will be issued upon receipt of release.)
Both the Vrubles and Dr. Srinivasan pointed to atypical
elements of the auction process, like placing stickers on artwork of interest
to them before the auction or negotiating a sales price with the auctioneer
before bidding.
Along with nearly 100 other disgruntled Park West customers, Dr. Srinivasan
and the Vrubles both turned for help to the Fine Art Registry Web site,
based in Phoenix.
For a $10 annual membership fee, Fine Art Registry offers
subscribers a system for tagging and registering artworks so they can
be tracked over the years. It has also made it a mission to publish buyer
beware articles on collecting many of which focus on Park
West.
The sites founder, Theresa Franks, first commissioned
an article for her site about art auctions at sea in April 2007 after
an investigative newspaper article on Park West in The Arizona Republic.
She has since fielded 45 complaints from passengers about Park Wests
sales of Dalí artwork and 50 more about other purchases from Park
West.
A common complaint, she said, is that the rarity or value
of an artwork has been misrepresented. If youre paying for
a Mercedes, you should get a Mercedes, not a 65 Volkswagen,
she said.
A former paralegal, Ms. Franks tracks the customers
complaints and provides basic advice to members on getting refunds. (Mainly,
she said, we tell them not to give up.)
She described the Park West buyers as newbies,
inexperienced in the art market, let alone the prints market, with its
profusion of technology and terminology. Few of the buyers were aware,
for instance, that forged Dalí prints flooded the market in the
1970s, she said.
Attracted by Famous Names
When they hear the names Picasso, Rembrandt, Dalí,
they recognize them, she said. Its easy to fall into
that trap. And, she added, it is not easy for these vacationers
to do due diligence on the cruise, where phone calls can be very expensive
and Internet access very slow.
Park Wests response to Fine Art Registry is a matter
of public record. In April the company sued Ms. Franks; Fine Art Registrys
lead writer, David Phillips; and a Dalí specialist that the site
quoted, Bruce Hochman, for defamation.
By phone, Mr. Scalglione also accused the Web site of
poisoning his customers against him as retaliation for Park
Wests not delivering business to Fine Art Registry by registering
art works with them. Ms. Franks called this an absolute, bald-faced
lie, adding, I wouldnt want their artwork tagged and
registered with Fine Art Registry.
For his part, Mr. Maldonado said he discovered Fine Art
Registry after doing lots of research on my own. And Mrs.
Vruble said she had not visited the Web site until this year: We
were already way hysterical before we heard of Fine Art Registry,
she said.
As for the Park West appraisals under scrutiny, Mr. Scaglione
said the company determines values through a network of independent appraisers
who cross reference they cross check.
We have literally spent hundreds of thousands of
dollars doing this, he said.
And he denied that the company promotes art to passengers
as an investment. We make no claim that somehow theyre going
to go out and make money or theyre going to become instant millionaires,
he said.
Mr. Scaglione left a position teaching mechanical engineering
at Wayne State University to open Park West as a gallery in Michigan in
1969. My big early hit was Escher, he said. I caught
him as he was very old, buying prints for $50, selling them easily for
hundreds. I wound up handling the estate. In 1993 he began selling
art on cruise ships.
Because Park West is privately held, it does not issue
revenue or earnings reports. But Mr. Scaglione said the company posted
between $300 million and $400 million in annual revenue last year, with
cruise-ship sales by 85 auctioneers accounting for roughly half that volume.
The rest comes from gallery sales in Michigan and special events like
hotel auctions, he said.
Asked about his financial arrangements with the cruise
lines, he confirmed that they receive an undisclosed percentage of Park
West revenue onboard. They are also guaranteed a certain minimum
against a percentage of the gross that he compared to rent.
On the question of refunds, Mr. Scaglione said Park West considers refunds
case by case. He would not disclose, he said, the number or nature
of them except to say there is never an admission of wrongdoing.
The refunds do, however, typically come with confidentiality
agreements, which Ms. Franks calls another Park West tactic intended to
silence its critics and to make sure nobodys going to be able
to walk into a lawyers office. She denounced the defamation
lawsuit against her and her colleagues in similar terms. Park West
has enough money to blot out the sun, she said.
Consulting With Experts
Park Wests suit against Fine Art Registry revolves
in part around the Web sites allegations that the companys
Dalí prints are inauthentic. The suit quotes, for example, a Fine
Art Registry interview in which Mr. Hochman said of the signatures on
these pieces: Theyre all the same. And we feel theyre
done with an auto pencil device.
Mr. Scaglione called those assertions bogus.
He cited the credentials of his Dalí appraiser, Bernard Ewell,
and described his Dalí material as perfectly authenticated
our documentation is sometimes five or six inches thick.
When asked about the Dalí expert Mr. Fields
exclusion of certain Divine Comedy prints with pencil signatures,
Mr. Scaglione said, That man was so senile at the end of his life,
its insane. (Mr. Field died in 2003, seven years after the
catalog was published.)
Mr. Scaglione also dismissed Mr. Fields official
catalog as the most unofficial thing you can imagine, adding
that there are 150 well-known fakes in that book that are
presented as authentic.
Frank Hunter, Mr. Fields successor at the Salvador
Dalí Archives in New York, countered indignantly in a telephone
interview, That is absurd, adding with emphasis, Id
like him to show me one.
Despite the libel lawsuit, Ms. Franks has continued to
investigate the authenticity of Park Wests Dalís. In May
she traveled with her writer Mr. Phillips to Stuttgart, Germany, to meet
Ernst Schöller, a senior art fraud detective with the Baden-Württemberg
state police, who has been working to remove fake Dalís from the
market there. They took for his inspection two of Dalís Biblia
Sacra prints that they said were sold by Park West as hand-signed
lithographs.
Mr. Schöllers verdict, captured on video and
in an article by Mr. Phillips, was that both works were photomechanical
reproductions, not lithographs, and were not hand-signed by Dalí.
He called them poster art.
Jessica Darraby, a Los Angeles lawyer who recently helped
two clients secure refunds for art purchases at sea from a company she
would not identify, said the cruise lines should take more responsibility
for the onboard art sales.
People are not watching their wallets like they
would on Times Square, she said. They are lulled into this
belief they are in a very safe place.
A spokesman for Regent declined to comment on customers
complaints against Park West. A spokesman for Royal Caribbean and Celebrity
said that in the case of a dispute, they would work with Park West to
resolve the matter in a manner that is mutually agreeable to all parties
involved.
Neither company would disclose its financial arrangement
with Park West; nor would Carnival, Norwegian, Oceania, Disney or Holland
America.
The cruise-ship setting also poses a challenge for law
enforcement. Theres a steady stream of people who have complaints
about how these art auctions are being handled on cruise ships,
said Don Hrycyk, a detective with the Los Angeles Police Department. But
he said he could not investigate because international waters are well
outside his territory.
I usually refer these people to the F.B.I.,
he said.
In May an F.B.I. agent took part in a panel discussion
in Los Angeles with Ms. Darraby, among others, about art fraud and forgery.
Most of the session focused on purchases aboard cruise ships. Asked afterward
by this reporter if the F.B.I. had opened an investigation into the cruise-ship
sales, the agent, Christopher Calarco, said, I cant talk about
current cases.
Contacted by telephone and asked if the agency was investigating,
an F.B.I. spokeswoman in Los Angeles said, We dont confirm
or deny investigations.
As for Mr. Maldonado, he hopes an investigation is under
way. Buying art from Park West, he said, was the only
part of my cruise experience that was a bad experience.
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