Prosecutor: Indicted art dealer, painter were ‘masters of forgery and deceit’

By Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN
updated 8:00 AM EDT, Wed April 23, 2014
Buyers who paid more than $8 million for this work argue that it's a forged Mark Rothko painting that was part of an elaborate fraud scheme.
Buyers who paid more than $8 million for this work argue that it’s a forged Mark Rothko painting that was part of an elaborate fraud scheme.
 

Spanish art dealer Jose Carlos Bergantiños Diaz helped persuade wealthy buyers to shell out millions of dollars for works he claimed famous masters of modern art had painted.

But in reality, U.S. authorities allege, the works he sold as Rothkos and Pollocks were fakes painted by an artist he met on a Manhattan street corner.

The alleged scheme stretched for nearly two decades, involved several New York art galleries and earned the conspirators more than $30 million, according to an indictment unsealed in federal court on Monday.

Last week, authorities closed in on Bergantiños and his brother, arresting them in Spain, federal prosecutors said. The brothers, according to the indictment, face conspiracy and money laundering charges.

The painter, Pei Shen Qian, was also indicted. He’s accused of making false statements to FBI agents, conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud. Investigators believe he fled to China as the alleged scheme started to unravel.

The indictment is the latest chapter in a case that’s rattled the modern art world, involving several galleries and wealthy buyers. Galleries made more than $80 million off of dozens of fake works, the indictment alleges. And Bergantiños and his associates made more than $33 million.

“Today’s charges paint a picture of perpetual lies and greed. As alleged, the defendants tricked victims into paying more than $33 million for worthless paintings which they fabricated in the names of world-famous artists,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement Monday. “The Bergantiños Diaz brothers then laundered and hid their illegal proceeds overseas. With today’s Indictment, the defendants must now answer for their alleged roles as modern masters of forgery and deceit.”

What started with a meeting between Bergantiños and Qian on a New York street corner evolved into an elaborate plot, the indictment alleges.

Qian would paint works in his home in Queens, New York. Then Bergantiños and his associates would peddle them through galleries to unsuspecting buyers who paid millions, the indictment says.

The alleged forged works purported to be paintings by famous artists, including Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Robert Motherwell and Clyfford Still, the indictment says.

But long before the works of art were sold, according to the indictment, Bergantiños played a role in the forgeries.

To make the paintings more convincing, Bergantiños bought old canvases at flea markets, stained newer canvases with tea bags to make them look older and gave Qian old paint to use.

Then, after the works were completed, according to the indictment, Bergantiños “subjected many fake works to various processes, such as heating them, cooling them, and exposing them to the elements outdoors, in an attempt to make the fake works seem older than they actually were.”

In at least one instance, the indictment says, Bergantiños used a blow dryer to heat up a forged painting.

Glafira Rosales leaves Manhattan Federal Court after pleading guilty in 2013 to selling over 60 works of fake art.
Glafira Rosales leaves Manhattan Federal Court after pleading guilty in 2013 to selling over 60 works of fake art.

Authorities have said his girlfriend, Glafira Rosales, was a key player in the alleged conspiracy. After pleading guilty last year to charges of conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and filing false federal income tax returns, she’s awaiting sentencing in federal court.

In an interview with Bloomberg in Shanghai last year, Qian admitted imitating modern masters’ works, but said he never intended to pass them off for profit. In court documents, prosecutors allege he received between several hundred and several thousand dollars for paintings the art dealers and galleries sold for millions.

“I made a knife to cut fruit,” he said, according to Bloomberg. “But if others use it to kill, blaming me is unfair.”

If the lawsuits filed against Bergantiños and his associates are any indication, there’s already plenty of finger-pointing over the alleged forgeries.

A number of civil cases against him are still pending, according to federal court records.

It was not immediately clear whether Bergantiños had legal representation or whether Spanish authorities plan to extradite him to the United States.

Original Article Found Here

Now YOU Can Try the Latest Apple Operating System Before It’s Released

 Want to be the first on your block to try Apple’s latest and greatest?

Well, we can’t get you an iPhone 6. On Tuesday, however, Apple did announce something neat: a new initiative that will allow regular folks like you and me to try out the latest versions of OS X before they’re released to the general public. Usually, this privilege is granted only to Apple-sanctioned developers, who had to pay $99 per year for the honor. Now, however, Apple has opened the program wider, to less technically savvy computer owners, and made it free to boot.

Those who are curious will get to try out beta releases of OS X in the weeks and months leading up to an official release, helping Apple find bugs and improve its software. TechCrunch’s Darrell Etherington points out that we are a little over a month away from Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, where the company could unveil its latest version of OS X.

The OS X Beta Seed Program, also known as Appleseed, let in its first non-developers on Tuesday and was first spotted by MacRumors.

The program is free to join, though you do have to sign a nondisclosure agreement (shhhh), possess an Apple ID, and agree to submit feedback to Apple. You’re also potentially inconveniencing yourself, as early versions of operating systems can be buggy, slow, or nonfunctional at times. Updates are made available in the Mac App Store.

Microsoft, you might remember, ran a similar program for its Windows 8 operating system last year. And Google lets web surfers try out unstable, in-the-works versions of its web browser Chrome by clicking a box in the Settings menu.

The Appleseed program probably isn’t the right path for non-techies to take. But if you’re confident in yourself, and in Apple, you can find more information on Apple’s website here.

Original Article Found Here

World’s Largest Aquarium, Ocean Kingdom, Opens In ‘The Orlando Of China’

on April 07 2014 5:55 AM

Chimelong Ocean Kingdom
A graphic illustration shows the grand plan for Ocean Kingdom. PGAV Destinations

China’s sky-high ambitions to build the world’s largest everything have found a new outlet in Hengqin Island, a once sleepy southern isle that’s uncoincidentally located next to the world’s biggest gambling hub, Macau.

Guinness World Records just declared the island’s debut attraction, Ocean Kingdom, the world’s biggest aquarium. A staggering 48.75 million liters (12.87 million gallons) of salt and fresh water helped it usurp the title from the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta when it officially opened to the public last weekend.

Yet, Ocean Kingdom’s superlatives don’t stop there. The $806.5 million complex, a 15-minute drive from Macau, not only set the Guinness World Record for largest aquarium but it also broke four other records, mostly for its gargantuan whale shark exhibit, which is itself the world’s largest tank, with a volume of 22.7 million liters (5.99 million gallons) of salt water.

The whale shark tank features the world’s largest acrylic panel and largest aquarium window at 39.6 meters (129 feet, 11.05 inches) by 8.3 meters (27 feet, 2.77 inches), and similarly claims the world’s largest underwater viewing dome, with an external diameter of 12 meters (29 feet, 4.44 inches).

“Breaking any world record is amazing, but to become the world’s largest aquarium requires phenomenal creative vision and immense engineering efforts,” Rowan Simons, president of Guinness World Records Greater China, said at Ocean Kingdom’s official opening event last weekend. “The result is an incredible attraction experience, and Guinness World Records is delighted to recognize the five specific world-beating achievements that make it so special.”

Ocean Kingdom welcomed a half-million visitors during its unofficial “soft opening” in January, and the 143-hectare (353-acre) complex hopes to woo a large chunk of the 29 million tourists who visit Macau each year now that it’s opened in full. Each of the park’s seven sections ushers visitors through the world’s waterways from the Amazon to Antarctica, offering an up-close look at an array of creatures like whale sharks, tropical spotted dolphins and Chinese white dolphins.

Ocean Kingdom is connected by a 1,000-meter (3,280-foot) “Grand Canal” to the Chimelong Hengqin Bay Hotel, which claims to be the “largest ecologically themed hotel in China.” Both Hengqin Island attractions are part of the greater Chimelong International Ocean Resort, whose goal is to become Asia’s first themed resort combining animal exhibits, thrill rides and entertainment.

If Ocean Kingdom sounds like something of a mix between Magic Kingdom and SeaWorld, that’s precisely the point. The resort’s developer, Guangdong Chimelong Group, has stated that it hopes to turn Hengqin Island into “the Orlando of China,” using the Florida city as a model.

Chimelong Group made a name for itself in 2006 when it opened China’s largest theme park, Chimelong Paradise, in Guangzhou. PGAV Destinations, the St. Louis-based design team behind the new aquarium, is known for its regional work on Hong Kong’s Grand Aquarium and the Terracotta Warriors Museum in Xi’an, as well as attractions at SeaWorld, Universal Studios and Six Flags.

Both companies have their eyes squarely on the future of Hengqin.

Hengqin Island boasts just 8,000 residents, but the Chinese government estimates that its population could skyrocket to a quarter of a million in six year’s time. In addition to the myriad tourism projects in the pipeline — including the world’s tallest Ferris wheel and longest wooden roller coaster — the Special Economic Zone could also house a new university, dozens of hotels, three golf courses and two yacht clubs — if all goes to plan.

 

Original article appeared here:  http://www.ibtimes.com/worlds-largest-aquarium-ocean-kingdom-opens-orlando-china-1568009