Not just a con. A system. The art market at its ugliest: silent deals, financial games, and artists left in the dark. No one taught us this in art school. Honestly? They should have.
I will def watch scam on netflix. I read the book All That Glitters: A Story of Friendship, Fraud, and Fine Art
Book by Orlando Whitfield. I also didn't know about this going on. Art school was not helpful in that regard. ( In many regards actually) Thanks. Enjoying reading these.
We’ve read a lot about art as asset, speculation, and fraud — but oddly, we never looked into the Inigo Philbrick scandal until now.
Not because it’s new (it’s not), but because it reveals something deeper: how little artists are told about the systems they’re part of.
Do you know of similar stories?
Not just big-name scandals — we’re interested in the small ones, too.
Private deals, shady collectors, hedge fund games, resale tricks… maybe even personal experiences.
We’re opening the radar. Let’s talk.
I will def watch scam on netflix. I read the book All That Glitters: A Story of Friendship, Fraud, and Fine Art
Book by Orlando Whitfield. I also didn't know about this going on. Art school was not helpful in that regard. ( In many regards actually) Thanks. Enjoying reading these.