Arts & culture
We have a long history of advising individuals, institutional collectors, estates and trustees, galleries, art and antique dealers on art-related issues. Our experts advise on issues from the disputed authenticity of Old Masters to conditional exemption claims for landed estates.
Expertise
Resolving arts disputes
We provide expert advice on disputes over ownership, authenticity and provenance, misattributed or damaged artwork, restitution or holocaust claims, art fraud, loss of sale and associated losses, and breach of contract.Charitable support of the arts
Many of our clients enjoy supporting the arts. We provide practical advice on the best way to manage gifts and bequests, tax-efficient giving and the setting up and day-to-day management of private charitable foundations for the arts.Tax efficient structuring of heritage property
Our world-renowned team provide expert inheritance tax planning in relation to chattels and historic buildings, conditional exemption claims on valuable pieces of art, purchases, gifts and leaseback sales, loans to museums, import and export controls on the movement of art, and owners’ and trustees’ responsibilities.Commercial advice
We provide pragmatic advice for contracts for artists, collectors, dealers and auction houses, and on sale and purchase agreements for collectors, dealers and art investment funds.
- Advising on the most tax efficient way of making gifts of art
to a US museum.
- Advising private collectors in a claim for professional
negligence against a leading auction house relating to a very well
known Old Master painting
- Advising on the most tax efficient way to make a distribution
of an Old Master to the client from a Trust
- Dispute with a Leading Auction
House: Acting for private collectors, a brother and
sister, in a claim against Christie's. The claim was for negligence
and breach of duty as to the research carried out and advice
provided to our clients relating to a painting 'Salome with the
Head of St John the Baptist', now thought to be by Titian. The
painting was sold by our clients in 1994 for £8,000 but was offered
for sale at auction in January 2009 with an estimate of $4-6
million. The proceedings were issued in 2007 but settled the day
before trial. The case attracted extensive media interest on the
basis of the Court papers despite the terms of the settlement
itself being subject to very strict confidentiality
restrictions.
- Advice to buyer on a dispute over
authenticity - advised a Russian purchaser of a
misattributed portrait, exploring possible action against either
the dealer himself or the organisation running the sale. The seller
subsequently admitted liability for negligent misrepresentation. As
the seller had declared himself insolvent, we also assisted our
client in maximising the recovery from the insolvency, successfully
increasing the size of the claim originally admitted by the
supervisors.
- Disputed title - receiving urgent
instructions to act for the owner of a painting which was due to be
included in an auction at Sotheby's on behalf of a third party who
alleged ownership of the painting; requesting that the disputed
item be immediately withdrawn from the auction and related
correspondence with Sotheby's and the third party; negotiating an
amicable settlement with the third party prior to the auction.
- Breach of contract and/or warranty of
authority - represented a West End gallery in a case
for breach of contract and/or breach of warranty of authority where
another gallery failed to provide the work. We were instructed to
sue the defaulting gallery for the loss of profit that the gallery
suffered.
- Loss of sale and associated losses
- advised a gallery which had agreed shipment of a
work to an art fair. The delivery was delayed and when delivered to
the art fair it was in a damaged state. Initiating proceedings
against the cargo company with assistance from lawyers in another
jurisdiction for the loss of the sale and associated damages.
- Advice to gallery on a dispute over authenticity of a
contemporary work - instructed by a well known
gallery which had sold two works by a well known contemporary
artist to a collector who was now demanding his money back over
concerns as to authenticity. The method in which the artist creates
the works had made authenticating his pieces very difficult and we
advised the client on the applicable requirements to satisfy their
legal obligations.
“wide ranging cultural and heritage property capability”
Legal 500 2012
“stands out for its art-related litigation experience”
Legal 500 2012