Man admits to Basquiat forgery scheme which saw fakes displayed in museum

Michael Barzman sold paintings created in ‘maximum of 30 minutes’ by accomplice, justice department says

To the admiring patrons of a special exhibition at the Orlando Museum of Art, they were among Jean-Michel Basquiat’s finest works, the angst of the troubled 1980s neo-expressionist rebel shining through the vivid colors of the compositions before them.

But what the paying public was really viewing were fakes, hastily slapped on offcuts of cardboard in 30 minutes or less by an unscrupulous auctioneer and an accomplice cashing in on the late artist’s famous name.

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Filmmaker Sara Driver on Jean-Michel Basquiat

In this week's episode of " Scheer Intelligence ," host and Truthdig Editor in Chief Robert Scheer talks with independent film director Sara Driver, whose film, " Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat ," explores the artist's life in the late 1970s and early '80s, before he reached the height of fame in the art world. Driver tells Scheer that while New York City during Basquiat's teenage years was dangerous, it was also a great place to be an artist and experiment.