• About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        • 2026 Art Law Conference
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
Center for Art Law
  • About
    About
    • Mission
    • Team
    • Boards
    • Mentions & Testimonials
    • Institutional Recognition
    • Annual Reports
    • Current & Past Sponsors
    • Contact Us
  • Resources
    Resources
    • Article Collection
    • Podcast: Art in Brief
    • AML and the Art Market
    • AI and Art Authentication
    • Newsletter
      Newsletter
      • Subscribe
      • Archives
      • In Brief
    • Art Law Library
    • Movies
    • Nazi-looted Art Restitution Database
    • Global Network
      Global Network
      • Courses and Programs
      • Artists’ Assistance
      • Bar Associations
      • Legal Sources
      • Law Firms
      • Student Societies
      • Research Institutions
    • Additional resources
      Additional resources
      • The “Interview” Project
  • Events
    Events
    • Worldwide Calendar
    • Our Events
      Our Events
      • All Events
      • Annual Conferences
        Annual Conferences
        • 2026 Art Law Conference
        • 2025 Art Law Conference
        • 2024 Art Law Conference
        • 2023 Art Law Conference
        • 2022 Art Law Conference
        • 2015 Art Law Conference
  • Programs
    Programs
    • Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      Visual Artists’ Legal Clinics
      • Art & Copyright Law Clinic
      • Artist-Dealer Relationships Clinic
      • Artist Legacy and Estate Planning Clinic
      • Visual Artists’ Immigration Clinic
    • Summer School
      Summer School
      • 2026
      • 2025
    • Internship and Fellowship
    • Judith Bresler Fellowship
  • Case Law Database
Home image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet Art law image/svg+xml 2021 Timothée Giet “Who Gave the Order?”: Art Censorship and Restorative Justice in Colombia
Back

“Who Gave the Order?”: Art Censorship and Restorative Justice in Colombia

February 7, 2025

(Credit: El Heraldo, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0, available at https://www.elheraldo.co/colombia/corte-constitucional-declara-que-mural-de-quien-dio-la-orden-se-queda-864097)

Credit: El Heraldo, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0, available at https://www.elheraldo.co/colombia/corte-constitucional-declara-que-mural-de-quien-dio-la-orden-se-queda-864097

By Maria Chica Jimenez

Military officers stand among neon red skulls and digits: the number of civilian assassinations that occurred under their command. Quien Dio La Orden?, Spanish for “Who Gave the Order,” interrogates and points to the guilt of the men in the mural. Five thousand seven hundred sixty-three was the number on the original version of the mural, which was painted on October 18, 2019, in front of the General José María Córdova Military Academy in Bogotá. It depicted Juan Carlos Barrera, Adolfo León Hernández, Mario Montoya, Nicacio Martínez, and Marcos Pinto—all generals from the National Army.[1] The mural was painted by a group of activists organized by the Movement of Victims of State Crimes (MOVICE) and censored mere hours later by members of the Colombian army, who painted over the mural in white.

Decades of Violence: A History of the Colombian Conflict

The internal conflict in Colombia began in the 1960s upon the formation of the far-left Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrilla group. It was a military wing of Colombia’s Communist Party and initially funded by the Soviet Union; but soon FARC turned to criminal activity for funding, including extortion, drug production, and trafficking. In response, the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC) emerged as a coalition of far-right paramilitary armies with links to the Colombian army, the Colombian government, and drug trafficking.[2] The combined violence of the parties involved in this conflict has lasted over 50 years, causing incredible damage to Colombian society as the country has amassed one of the largest internally displaced populations in the world, nearing 7 million in 2024.[3]

One of the darkest parts of this conflict’s history is that of False Positives, a series of extrajudicial killings carried out by the Colombian army between 2002 and 2008.[4] It was not merely a few rogue soldiers committing these executions—it was a common practice throughout army brigades in Colombia to demonstrate “positive” or successful results by showcasing an increasing number of guerrilla member deaths. In pursuit of state legitimacy and a demonstration of the government’s power over destructive guerrilla forces, officers and soldiers lured innocent civilians to remote locations with false promises of job offers or other incentives, and instead murdered and framed them as guerrilla fighters in order to report a higher number of killings.[5] The State was thereby taking advantage of a Colombian public that had been devastated by a decades-long war and was desperately seeking justice, resorting to deceitful ploys while benefiting from the facade of security and legitimacy this practice created.

The Chamber to Acknowledge Truth of the Special Jurisdiction for Peace arose from the 2016 Peace Agreement and was specifically designated as a transitional justice effort under the negotiation pillar of victims’ rights.[6] In July 2018, the Jurisdiction opened case 003: “Illegitimate deaths presented as individuals in combat by state agents.” Through this process, the Jurisdiction declared the statistics of the False Positives tragedy: at least 6,402 individuals were illegally murdered and presented as having been killed in combat between 2002–2008.[7] The Jurisdiction also confirmed that this occurred rampantly and without punishment for any responsible entities. However, the work before the MOVICE mural was merely statistical research; no one had yet been charged in relation to these crimes. The mural was therefore both timely in its investigation of the State’s guilt and radically forward-thinking in its demand for accountability.

Censorship and Legal Controversy

The issue of censorship with the MOVICE mural is extensive, beginning when the Colombian army’s 13th brigade painted over the mural mere hours after its creation. However, the mural was based on a digital version, which was shared on social media by activist collective Puro Veneno after the physical mural’s removal, thus making the circumstances of censorship more complex.[8] Along with the hashtag #EjercitoCensuraMural, the images of the mural went viral and quickly circulated within the capital city of Bogota, getting reproduced into posters, face masks, and other merchandise. The mass circulation of the False Positives scandal stirred outrage from some of the commanders depicted, especially since the mural specifically showcased the faces, names, and murder counts under the military officers. Marcos Evangelista Pinto Lizarazo and Mario Montoya Uribe promptly filed tutelas, a mechanism where an individual can claim that a fundamental right is being violated. They claimed that the mural was damaging their reputation, and demanded the mural’s removal from any physical or online platforms.[9] Despite the fact that the reason the public knew about the False Positive statistics was from the larger effort by the State’s peace process towards restorative justice and transparency, a local court ruled in favor of the military officers. The mural was ordered to be removed from both physical and online platforms, even though the mural had already been widely shared and entered a larger public consciousness. This ruling was additionally controversial given that MOVICE’s mural was an unexaggerated exaltation of the reality of False Positives as it had been communicated to the public. It had instead been marked as defamatory by officers who benefited from silence and distance from these events.

The controversy around this case would influence a consequent intervention in the case by various organizations, including Media Defence, which filed an amicus curiae before the Constitutional Court of Colombia. Not only was the artists’ freedom of expression again brought to the court’s attention, but the amicus curiae further explained that ruling in favor of the officers would devastatingly diminish rights to public interest information and, by extension, breach international human rights law.[10] The Constitutional Court ultimately ruled that the mural was a legitimate form of expression, and given the impact of the False Positives scandal, that the mural and its information were also a matter of public interest. The protection of the officer’s reputation was therefore regarded as an invalid restriction upon the artists’ freedom of expression, and claims of defamation were found to be baseless. The MOVICE activists promptly repainted the mural in front of the Military Academy the December after the ruling, updating the statistics to include 6,402 victims and additional high-level commanders.[11]

Restorative Justice and Public Memory

The mural’s censorship only emboldened its political urgency, as it proved to be a powerful public art piece charged with the intention of community healing. This healing is part of the larger concept of transitional justice that artwork is particularly able to address; through the memorialization of significant human rights events, especially when such events have an effect of inconceivable collective trauma upon a community, artwork pushes for visibility and remembrance. Legal scholar Martha Minow describes the importance of such visibility in her book Between Vengeance and Forgiveness. Her insights are reminiscent of the deeply instilled tragedy that has stained Colombian morale for decades: both the tragedy of mass innocent murder and the tragedy of betrayal by a people’s own government. She writes:

No response can ever be adequate when your son has been killed by police ordered to shoot at a crowd of children . . . or when your brother who struggled against a repressive government has disappeared and left only a secret police file, bearing no due to his final resting place. Closure is not possible. Even if it were, any closure would insult those whose lives are forever ruptured. Even to speak, to grope for words to describe horrific events, is to pretend to negate their unspeakable qualities and effects. Yet silence is also an unacceptable offense, a shocking implication that the perpetrators in fact succeeded, a stunning indictment that the present audience is simply the current incarnation of the silent bystanders complicit with oppressive regimes.[12]

The MOVICE mural is, on its own, insufficient at realizing closure or erasing the human rights violations that occurred, yet it nonetheless represents a step toward transparency necessary for any progress to be made. The mural becomes energized through the community it is in dialogue with, making the recurrent censorship of the work more than the repression of a single artist’s expression. Censorship, in this case, was an attempt at re-victimization—an ironic and demoralizing step back from the State’s efforts towards transparency and restoration.

Conclusion

The ultimate endurance of the mural and its reproductions is a testament to the persevering efforts towards healing by the larger Colombian public, acknowledging decades of senseless tragedy and corrupt state systems of power and pointing to the ways collective activist efforts can culminate in tangible visibility and justice. This was especially evident in the Constitutional Court’s ruling, which affirmed freedom of expression as essential to preserving public information and collective memory—making the case of the MOVICE mural a uniquely powerful victory against censorship.

The virality of the mural’s imagery continues to diffuse and intertwine it with a larger community, as both the wide reach of social media and the continuous updating of the statistics in the mural’s design were crucial to the artwork’s social impact. The collective effort behind this work ultimately highlights the necessity for timeliness and collaboration, especially with artwork meant to heal and validate the realities of difficult histories. After all, the mural presents a question that repeatedly demands to be answered, not something that stays still. Who Gave the Order? is a call that extends beyond the physical constraints of a mural, challenging the systems of power that continue to suppress and striving to exalt truth, healing, and memory.

Suggested Readings and Videos:

  • Colombia: Events of 2022, Human Rights Watch.
  • Mural de falsos positivos que fue borrado ha sido repetido y borrado en más lugares, Noticias Uno Colombia (2019).
  • Alejandro Valderrama Herrera, Art and culture as processes of healing and memory in Colombia, International Catalan Institute for Peace.
  • Christine Bell, Introductory Note to United Nations Security Council Resolution 2261, International Legal Materials, Vol. 56, No. 1 (2017).
  • Vanessa Buschschluter, ‘False positives’: Colombian army apologises for killing civilians, BBC News (2023).

About the Author:

Maria Chica Jimenez is a second-year undergraduate at Stanford University studying Public Policy, Art History, and Human Rights. She focuses on the intersection of art, law, and social justice, drawing from her experience in museum education, community engagement, and human rights advocacy.

References:

  1. MOVICE Murals Case, No. X, RFK Human Rights (Aug. 23, 2021), available at https://civicspace-casetracker.rfkhumanrights.org/cases/movice-murals-case/. ↑
  2. Bilal Y. Saab & Alexandra W. Taylor, Criminality and Armed Groups: A Comparative Study of FARC and Paramilitary Groups in Colombia, 32 Stud. Conflict & Terrorism 455 (2009). ↑
  3. Colombia Situation Overview, UNHCR – UN Refugee Agency (2024), available at https://reporting.unhcr.org/operational/situations/colombia-situation. ↑
  4. El Rol de Los Altos Mandos en Falsos Positivos: Evidencias de Responsabilidad de Generales y Coroneles del Ejército Colombiano por Ejecuciones de Civiles, Human Rights Watch (2015). ↑
  5. El Rol de Los Altos Mandos en Falsos Positivos: Evidencias de Responsabilidad de Generales y Coroneles del Ejército Colombiano por Ejecuciones de Civiles, Human Rights Watch (2015). ↑
  6. Brian Harper & Holly Sonneland, Explainer: Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP), AS/COA (2019), available at https://www.as-coa.org/articles/explainer-colombias-special-jurisdiction-peace-jep. ↑
  7. “MOVICE.” 2021. PBI Colombia (English). December 28, 2021. https://pbicolombia.org/tag/movice/. ↑
  8. Censorship of Street Art in Colombia: The MOVICE Mural and the ‘False Positives’ Scandal, Media Defence (Feb. 10, 2023), available at https://www.mediadefence.org/news/movice-mural/. ↑
  9. Censorship of Street Art in Colombia: The MOVICE Mural and the ‘False Positives’ Scandal, Media Defence (Feb. 10, 2023), available at https://www.mediadefence.org/news/movice-mural/. ↑
  10. Media Defence Amicus Curiae on MOVICE Mural, Media Defence (2023), available at https://www.mediadefence.org/news/movice-mural/. ↑
  11. Censorship of Street Art in Colombia: The MOVICE Mural and the ‘False Positives’ Scandal, Media Defence (Feb. 10, 2023), available at https://www.mediadefence.org/news/movice-mural/. ↑
  12. Martha Minow, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History After Genocide and Mass Violence (Beacon Press 1998). ↑

 

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not meant to provide legal advice. Readers should not construe or rely on any comment or statement in this article as legal advice. For legal advice, readers should seek a consultation with an attorney.

Post navigation

Previous Stolen Art Databases, Bridging Gaps, and Balancing the Need for Private Policing
Next Intellectual Property Protections and the Art Market in Japan

Related Art Law Articles

The Legal and Economic Landscape of Federal Arts Funding Lauren Stein
Art lawNEA

Endowments for the Arts: Shrinking Legal and Economic Landscape of Federal Arts Funding

May 4, 2026
Center for Art Law Canada Pledges Resale Royalty
Art lawCanadaresale royalty

Canada pledges an artist’s resale royalty—can the United States follow “suite”?

April 9, 2026
Abraham and Isaac Returned Home Center for Art Law
Art law

Abraham and Isaac: Sculptures returned home after Spanish Supreme Court decision

April 8, 2026
Center for Art Law
What the Heck is Copyright (2)

What is Copy, Right?

2026 Annual Conference

Let’s explore Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century together.

 

Reserve Your Ticket TODAY
Guidelines AI and Art Authentication

AI and Art Authentication

Explore the Guidelines for AI and Art Authentication for the responsible, ethical, and transparent use of artificial intelligence.

Download here
Center for Art Law

Follow us on Instagram for the latest in Art Law!

Join us on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School for our Join us on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026: What is Copy, Right? 

We are very excited to introduce you to the topic and speakers for, Panel 1: So Inappropriate — Lessons About Copyright Law and Art: First There Was Art, Then Copyright, Then Fair Use… and Now AI?

From early copyright doctrines to contemporary fair use debates, this panel examines how artists and lawyers have navigated questions of ownership, appropriation, and originality in visual art. Panelists will explore key developments in copyright law affecting traditional artistic practices, from borrowing and remixing to transformative use, while also considering how emerging technologies, including AI, are beginning to reshape long‑standing legal frameworks and artistic norms.

Moderator: Irina Tarsis, Founder, Center for Art Law
Speakers: Vivek Jayaram, Founder, Jayaram Law; Vincent Wilcke, Pace Gallery; Greg Allen, Artist and writer 

Reserve your tickets using the link in our bio or by visiting our website itsartlaw.org 🎟️ 
See you soon!
Next stop: Venice. The 61st Biennale has been maki Next stop: Venice. The 61st Biennale has been making waves and headlines for weeks and the doors have not even opened yet. The jury refused to award prizes and resigned nine days before the opening over geopolitical controversies. Some artists boycott while others show up even if unwelcome. Some pavilions will be empty, some will not be open to the public… Sources of funds, sources of inspiration, so many questions, so much on display for critical eyes. Meanwhile the boats are waiting for anyone lucky enough to find themselves in the floating world.

Help us reflect on the Biennale by sharing your art law stories.

#ArtLaw #Venice #Biennale2026 #ArtWorld #BiennaleofDissent #LaSerenissima #GoldenLion #SeeArtThinkArtLaw
Center for Art Law is very pleased to welcome Prof Center for Art Law is very pleased to welcome Professor Ben Zhao as the Keynote Speaker for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026! 

Ben Zhao is the Neubauer Professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago where he, and a team of researchers at the university, developed NightShade & Glaze, two data-poisoning tools which protects artists' work from being scraped for AI data training. 

Professor Zhao will discuss tools, such as NightShade, which can assist in defending art in the age of AI. 

The 2026 conference will focus on copyright law as it relates to visual art, artificial intelligence, and the rapidly evolving legal landscape of the 21st century. The program will begin with Professor Zhao's keynote address, followed by three substantive panels designed to build on one another throughout the afternoon. In addition, we will host a curated group of exhibitors featuring databases, legal tools, and technology platforms relevant to artists’ rights, copyright, and AI. The program will conclude with a reception, providing time for continued discussion, networking, and engagement among speakers, exhibitors, and attendees. 

We hope you join us! Reserve your tickets now using the link in our bio 🎟️ 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #copyrightlaw
A huge thank you to our hosts and incredible speak A huge thank you to our hosts and incredible speakers who made this London panel discussion truly special! 🙏✨ 🇬🇧 🇺🇦 

We were so fortunate to hear from:

🎤 Rakhi Talwar | RTalwar Compliance
🎤 Raminta Dereskeviciute | McDermott Will & Schulte
🎤 Daryna Pidhorna, Lawyer & Analyst | The Raphael Lemkin Society
🎤 Timothy Kompancheko | Bernard, Inc.
🎤 Yuliia Hnat | Museum of Contemporary Art NGO
🎤 Irina Tarsis | Center for Art Law

Your insights, expertise, and passion made this a conversation we won't forget. Thank you for sharing your time and knowledge with us! 💫

Bottom Line: the art market has power and responsibility. Our panel "Art, Money, and the Law: Sanctions & AML Enforcement in 2026" tackled the hard questions around money laundering, sanctions compliance, and what's at stake for art market participants in today's regulatory landscape.

⚠️ Regulators are watching and "history has it's eyes on you..." too We don't have to navigate the legal waters alone. Let's keep the conversation going.

What was your biggest takeaway? 

#ArtLaw #AMLCompliance #Sanctions #ArtMarket #ArtAndMoney #Enforcement2026
At the Center for Art Law we are preparing for our At the Center for Art Law we are preparing for our Annual Art Law Conference 2026, "What is Copy, Right? Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century", and we hope you are as excited as we are! The event will take place on May 27th at Brooklyn Law School. 

In addition to the panels throughout the day, which will offer insights into the rapidly shifting landscape of art and copyright law, our conference will feature exhibitors showcasing resources for promoting artists' rights, and a silent auction aimed at bolstering the Center's efforts. 

We would like to invite you to take part in and support this year's Annual Art Law Conference by being an exhibitor or sponsor. We express our sincere appreciation to all of our sponsors, exhibitors and you! 

Find more information and reserve your tickets using the link in our bio! See you soon!
In this episode, we speak with art market expert D In this episode, we speak with art market expert Doug Woodham to unpack how Jean-Michel Basquiat became one of the most enduring cultural icons of our time.

Moving beyond his rise in 1980s New York, this episode focuses on what happened after his death. We explore how his estate, led by his father, shaped his legacy through control of supply, copyright, and narrative; how early collectors and market forces drove the value of his work; and how museums and media cemented his place in art history.

Together, we explore the bigger question: is creating great art enough, or does becoming an icon require an entire ecosystem working behind the scenes?

🎙️ Check out the podcast anywhere you get your podcasts using the link in our bio!

Also, please join us on May 27  for the highly anticipated Art Law Conference 2026, held at Brooklyn Law School and Online (Hybrid). Entitled “What is Copy, Right? Visual Art, AI, and the Law in the 21st Century,” this year’s conference explores the evolving relationship between visual art, copyright law, and artificial intelligence!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #podcast #legal #research #legalresearch #newepisode #artmarket #basquiat
Amy Sherald cancelled her mid-career retrospective Amy Sherald cancelled her mid-career retrospective, scheduled at the National Portrait Gallery (NPG) in D.C., after a curatorial controversy over the potential removal of her recent work, "Trans Forming Liberty" (2024). Sherald denounced the attempt to remove this work as a blatant and intentional erasure of trans lives. 

This is one of the best examples and the most illustrative examples of the current administration's growing efforts to control the Smithsonian Institution's programming. In this climate of political tension, how do cultural institutions defend themselves against censorship and keep their curatorial independence?

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #artlawyer #legalreserach #artcuration #curatorialindependance #censorship
Grab 15% off tickets the upcoming bootcamp on Arti Grab 15% off tickets the upcoming bootcamp on Artist-Dealer Relations, now available online!! 

Center for Art Law’s Art Lawyering Bootcamp: Artist-Dealer Relationships is an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with visual artists and dealers, in the unique aspects of their relationship. The bootcamp will be led by veteran attorneys specializing in art law.

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to the main contracts and regulations governing dealers' and artists' businesses. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in the specificities of the law as applied to the visual arts.

Bootcamp participants will be provided with training materials, including presentation slides and an Art Lawyering Bootcamp handbook with additional reading resources.

Art Lawyering Bootcamp participants with CLE tickets will receive New York CLE credits upon successful completion of the training modules. CLE credits pending board approval.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!

Get 15% off using the code: Final15 

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #research #lawyer #artlawyer #bootcamp #artistdealer #CLE #trainingprogram
On the night of April 15–16, 2026 alone, Russia se On the night of April 15–16, 2026 alone, Russia sent hundreds of drones and missiles on sleeping cities across Ukraine, killing and injuring dozens of civilians. War is funded in part by individuals who have important artworks in their personal collections. This full-scale invasion of Ukraine, now in its fifth year, daily exacts a grave toll on Ukrainian lives and cultural heritage, while fundamentally disrupting European commerce. In response, art market participants have adapted their practices, most have accepted, if not always embraced, the need to scrutinize the source of funds and the ultimate beneficiaries of their transactions. Yet there is a growing sense that parts of the trade are holding their breath, waiting to see when they might safely return to dealing with the oligarchs who continue to fund the Russian war machine.

For art market participants operating in the UK, compliance is no longer a peripheral concern, it is a legal imperative. Regulators are watching, the consequences of non-compliance increasingly extend beyond administrative penalties into criminal liability, and private-public partnerships offer the most credible path toward a more resilient and trustworthy market. 

Join us on April 24th for a panel discussion in London on the current state of AML enforcement and sanctions.

🎟️ Grab your tickets using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #lawyer #artcrime #london #artissues #museumissues
Sotheby's sold Modigliani’s Portrait de Leopold Zb Sotheby's sold Modigliani’s Portrait de Leopold Zborowski to Cahn in 2003 for the low price of about $1.55 million. In 2016, Cahn claimed he was verbally informed about authenticity issues with the painting by Sotheby's. The parties did make an agreement regarding Cahn reselling with Sotheby's for a guaranteed price in exchange for releasing the auction house from all claims related to the painting. Cahn claims that he attempted to set this process in motion in June 2025, but he received no response. Cahn now seeks damages totaling $2.67 million, plus interest and attorneys’ fees, for breach of contract. 

Through this dispute, Vivianne Diaz's article highlights a bigger issue in the art market by explaining how forgeries negatively affect both collectors and auction houses, and how auction houses need to be more careful, but most importantly, proactive in their authentication determinations.

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #legalresearch #art #Modigliani #LeopoldZborowski #sothebys
Don't miss our upcoming April 20th bootcamp on Art Don't miss our upcoming April 20th bootcamp on Artist-Dealer Relations, now available online!!

Center for Art Law’s Art Lawyering Bootcamp: Artist-Dealer Relationships is an in-person, full-day training aimed at preparing lawyers for working with visual artists and dealers, in the unique aspects of their relationship. The bootcamp will be led by veteran attorneys specializing in art law.

This Bootcamp provides participants -- attorneys, law students, law graduates and legal professionals -- with foundational legal knowledge related to the main contracts and regulations governing dealers' and artists' businesses. Through a combination of instructional presentations and mock consultations, participants will gain a solid foundation in the specificities of the law as applied to the visual arts.

Bootcamp participants will be provided with training materials, including presentation slides and an Art Lawyering Bootcamp handbook with additional reading resources.

Art Lawyering Bootcamp participants with CLE tickets will receive New York CLE credits upon successful completion of the training modules. CLE credits pending board approval.

🎟️ Grab tickets using the link in our bio!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #legal #research #lawyer #artlawyer #bootcamp #artistdealer #CLE #trainingprogram
The historic Bayeux Tapestry, conserved in Normand The historic Bayeux Tapestry, conserved in Normandy, France, is scheduled to be loaned from the Bayeux Museum to the British Museum for ten months beginning in the fall of 2026. This is the first time the tapestry will have returned to the UK in over 900 years. 

This loan, authorized by France, has raised multiple controversies, particularly over conservation concerns. Nevertheless, it has been made possible through a combination of factors, including improved conservation techniques, enhanced transport precautions, comprehensive loan agreements, insurance, and the application of relevant protective laws. 

Check out our recent article by Josie Goettel to read more about this historic loan regarding not only in its symbolic significance, but also in its technical complexity.

📚 Click the link in our bio to read more!

#centerforartlaw #artlaw #artlawyer #lawyer #legalresearch #legal #museumissues #bayeuxtapisserie #bayeuxtapestry #britishmuseum #bayeuxmuseum
  • About the Center
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter
  • Upcoming Events
  • Internship
  • Case Law Database
  • Log in
  • Become a Member
  • Donate
DISCLAIMER

Center for Art Law is a New York State non-profit fully qualified under provision 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code.

The Center does not provide legal representation. Information available on this website is
purely for educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.

TERMS OF USE AND PRIVACY POLICY

Your use of the Site (as defined below) constitutes your consent to this Agreement. Please
read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy carefully.

© 2026 Center for Art Law