Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board


The Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board, Inc. was a private corporation that certified the authenticity of works by the artist, Andy Warhol, from 1995 to early 2012.

History

The organization was created in 1995 in association with The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
The Board, based in New York City, consisted of six members, including art historians, curators and those who personally knew Warhol and his work. They met three times a year to examine works and made determinations only of authenticity, not market value. Appraisals took one month and ARTnews reported that around 10 to 20% of submitted works were 'considered questionable.' The Board did not share its methodology, citing privacy concerns. Board members included American art curator David Whitney and designer Jed Johnson.
The Board sometimes received criticism for its operating methods and what was perceived as arbitrariness in judging whether or not a work was an authentic Warhol. Works deemed inauthentic that were covered prominently in the press include 'Brillo Boxes' produced after Warhol's death and a 1964 silkscreen self-portrait that had earlier been authenticated by Warhol's business manager. In an article about the Board in Vanity Fair, art dealer John Woodward is quoted as saying that Warhol is 'the most faked' artist in America. The author of the article, Michael Shnayerson added,'Often, as a result, the Warhol board is simply blamed as the messenger of bad news to hoodwinked buyers'

Dissolution

In October 2011, the Andy Warhol Foundation Board of Directors dissolved the Authentication Board. Speaking to The New York Observer, Warhol Foundation President Joel Wachs explained the reasons for the decision, saying the Authentication Board was subjected to legal action '10 or so times' in its 15 years of operation. While it 'won every single one of those lawsuits, the process was extraordinarily expensive, costing us at least $10 million defending ourselves. Eventually, we decided that we wanted our money to go to artists and not to lawyers'.
The Foundation continues to support development of the Warhol catalogues raisonné, which encompass judgements about the authenticity of individual works. Wachs explains that the catalogue project is primarily scholarly and not explicitly connected to the art market. The editors review works submitted for possible inclusion, but do not render judgement outside the context of the catalogues themselves.