Inigo Philbrick, the disgraced art dealer who committed the largest art fraud in American history, may have been released from prison but his crimes still resonate.
If an old friend landed in jail, would you keep the art world’s “code of silence” or write a memoir?
“Three decades ago, Stroud founded the Acadia Summer Arts Program on Mount Desert Island in Maine, long ago dubbed “Kamp Kippy.” It has served as a kind of international think-tank, where artists, critics, curators, administrators and intellectuals gather, again, with no demands or preconceptions.”
As homelessness beckoned, a vaguely-worded property advert appeared in the London Evening Standard, about which Craddock and Pearlman "had a feeling": '‘Large House, Central London, To Let.”
“Now out of prison and “wearing the scarlet letter,” Philbrick is searching for a second act.”