Английская Википедия:Inigo Philbrick

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox person Inigo Philbrick (born 1987) is a former American art dealer who was jailed for wire fraud in May 2022 for seven years, and ordered to forfeit $86.7 million.[1]

Early life

Inigo Philbrick is the son of Harry Philbrick, who was the director of The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut, from 1996 to 2010.[2] Philbrick was educated at Joel Barlow High School in Redding, Connecticut, and graduated in 2005.[3] He studied art at Goldsmiths, University of London, as his father did before him.[2]

Career

In 2006, he began an internship at London's White Cube gallery.[2] He later become their head of secondary-market sales at the gallery.

In October 2011, with backing from White Cube's owner, Jay Jopling, he set up Modern Collections at 89 Mount Street in London's Mayfair, focusing on the secondary market for the work of contemporary artists.[2] His first show included work by Kelley Walker and Wade Guyton (neither were White Cube artists).[2]

In 2013, Philbrick started his own business, and Jopling continued to provide financial support.[2] Artists traded included Rudolf Stingel, Christopher Wool, and Mike Kelley.[2] Philbrick had galleries in London and Miami.[4]

Philbrick was later determined to have engaged in various fraudulent practices.[5] These included selling shares in a single piece of art to multiple investors resulting in the sold shares totaling more than 100 percent; selling artworks or using them as loan collateral without the knowledge of their owners; and providing "fraudulent" documents to "artificially inflate the value of artworks."[5][6]

Following the issuance of an arrest warrant by the U.S authorities on 11 June 2020, Philbrick was identified by US law enforcement agents, hiding in Port Vila, the capital of the Pacific island of Vanuatu.[7] Acting on a request from the U.S. Embassy in Papua New Guinea, Minister Kalsakau subsequently signed a removal order allowing for his deportation from the South Pacific Ocean nation. As a fugitive from justice in the United States since October 2019, U.S. Federal law enforcement agents subsequently took the art dealer into custody and transported to Guam to answer to a criminal complaint charging him with engaging in a multi-year scheme to defraud various individuals and entities in order to finance his art business.[8][9]

Philbrick appeared in court via video link in Guam on June 15 where his charges of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft were read. Given his flight risk, the judge remanded him into custody and authorised Philbrick’s transfer to the United States.[10]

After being incarcerated for nearly a year and a half, Philbrick plead guilty to one count of wire fraud on 18 November 2021 in the Southern District of New York.[11] On 23 May 2022, he was sentenced by District Judge Sidney H. Stein to 84 months in prison, followed by two years of supervised release and ordered to pay $86m in fraud restitution.[12] According to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons "Find an Inmate" search system, Philbrick completed his sentence of incarceration on 10 February 2024.

Personal life

The art world people that he worked with included the American artist, academic and writer Kenny Schachter, who has lost more than $1.5 million to Philbrick.[1] Schachter called him a "very talented art dealer", a "mini Madoff" who had "sabotaged his entire life for short-term greed", and fell due to "a toxic mix of arrogance and alcohol".[1] As early as May 2020, Schachter had written off Philbrick as "the Bernie Madoff of the art world".[13]

He is in a relationship with socialite Victoria Baker-Harber (daughter of Michael Baker-Harber), a regular on the British reality television show Made in Chelsea.[4][1] In November 2020, she gave birth to their daughter.[7]

Previously, he was in a relationship with Francisca Mancini, a "Buenos Aires–born art adviser turned perfume maker".[14][2] They had a daughter together in 2016.[14]

References

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