Copyright 2000 by Scott
Hays
Magazine: Orange
Coast, 2000
Topic: The Greatest Living
American Art Forger
Byline: Scott Hays
Tony Tetro stands outside Margaritaville
in Newport Beach, California, resplendent
in his rumpled early-evening uniform—faded
jeans, untucked Hawaiian shirt, white
tennis shoes, white cotton socks. He might
just have rolled out of bed in these very
clothes, for his eyes are still red and
crusty, his throat still shuddering in
smoker’s hack. Temporarily separated
from his beloved bourbon-on-the-rocks,
Tetro indulges his addiction to Lucky
Strikes, wearily leaning against the restaurant/bar
as he attempts to follow through the open
door a conversation on God only knows
what between two twentysomething waitresses.
However concerned in private Tetro claims
to be about his finances, in public he
doesn’t seem to have a care in the
world, especially today, after depositing
a down-payment check of $6,000 from a
mysterious, wealthy client who wants him
to “emulate” the 1977 painting,
Lincoln in Dalivision, by Spanish
surrealist artist Salvador Dali.
It’s the biggest chunk of green
he’s seen in four years since his
release from jail and his move to a nearby
two-story hotel with a turtle pond in
the lobby. “I haven’t made
a serious purchase of clothes in I don’t
know how long,” he rasps, in a voice
like a rake scraped through gravel. “I
used to have my suits hand-made by an
Italian designer. It’s not that
I miss the money so much, I just wish
I didn’t have to always worry about
paying rent.”
The expression starving artist
is admittedly overused, but the incongruity
between Tetro’s lifestyle today
and the one he lived before he was arrested
for art forgery is resoundingly evident.
Where once he cruised around Beverly Hills
in a Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit, a Lamborghini
Countach, or one of two Ferraris, today
he drives a rented Mercedes obtained in
a “buddy deal” for $350 per
month. Where once he dined weekly at swanky
dinner house Nicky Blair’s on Hollywood’s
Sunset Boulevard, now defunct, today he
stands on buffet lines of happy-hour food
at local Mexican restaurants. Where once
750 people in tuxedos and evening gowns
celebrated his 40th birthday, this year,
for his 50th birthday, he sat alone in
a bar drinking bourbon on the rocks, blowing
out a single candle set in a glazed doughnut.
Only his gift has remained constant.
For Tony Tetro is an artistic prodigy,
a man of virtually limitless talent. But
instead of developing his own style and
original work, he chose a career as an
“emulator,” rendering lithographs,
drawings and watercolors of Chagall, Picasso
and Miro, oils of Rembrandt, Renoir and
Monet, that were either indistinguishable
from an original, or seamlessly slipped
into an artist’s oeuvre—down
to the aging, discoloration and distress
of a work subjected to hundreds of years
of stress. Arrested as an art forger in
1989, Tetro became in 1991 the only living
American artist slapped with a court order
mandating he clearly sign his name to
the back of every work he creates, so
they can’t be passed off as originals
and sold for outrageous sums of money
to unwary art collectors.
“He was just a brilliant mind that
went astray—a Frankenstein,”
once quipped Venice gallery owner Tom
Binder.
Being Salvador Dali
When 19-year-old Antonio Tetro arrived
in Southern California in 1969, he seduced
the art world with an alluring combination
of genius and bravado. With no formal
art training, schooled only through reading
books and visiting museums, Tetro quickly
endeared himself to the wealthy jet-set
with a talent so extraordinary, and so
prolific, that his oil paintings and lithographs
alone, some say, contributed significantly
to the inflated prices of the art-market
boom of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
What started as simply a sideline easily
mushroomed into a multi-million-dollar
business that threw into question, for
many art collectors, the distinction between
a “masterpiece” and a “reproduction.”
Tetro shrugs off queries as to why he
spurned creation of his own, original
work. “I never had the desire to
develop my own style,” he says simply.
“I enjoyed the whole process of
coming up with something absolutely authentic.
I was obsessed with everything being perfect.”
In pursuit of perfection, he experimented
with paints, and used formaldehyde and
a special baking process, to produce craquelure,
the surface cracking of oil paintings
indicating a painting’s age. He
traveled to Europe to purchase stretcher
bars and linen canvases with specific
weight, unique to the region where a particular
artist worked. “Every watercolor,
oil and acrylic by a particular artist
was created during a certain period of
time,” he says. “You have
to know what they did during these times,
and then come up with a painting that
made sense. It’s like playing chess—you
have to get into the thoughts of the artist.”
For example, Tetro dated one particular
oil painting to 1953, when the artist,
Salvador Dali, was engaged in the creation
of a series of exploding heads. “Dali
had a summer home in Spain,” Tetro
explains, “and he would often use
this particular seascape formation outside
his home in the background of his paintings.
I found a drawing he did of an exploding
head, and superimposed it on the seascape.
It was historically accurate. I enjoyed
every minute of it.”
His reputation for flawless reproductions,
as well as his bank account, grew to legendary
proportions. He purchased a tri-level
condominium in Claremont and wallpapered
it with lizard skin and suede. He decorated
the first level with Dali oil paintings,
the second level with Picassos and the
third with Miro lithographs—all
created by his own hands. He invested
several hundred thousand dollars to recreate
a 1958 Ferrari Testarossa race car, bringing
to the auto’s “emulation”
the same care and precision he lavished
on his art. “For well over 10 years,
every cop in the valley, and even most
of my neighbors, were certain I was a
drug dealer,” he smiles. “And
the more I defended myself, the more I
wasn’t believed.”
Savaged by Rats
In late 1988, Japanese artist Hiro Yamagata
walked into the Carol Lawrence Gallery
on Sunset Boulevard and immediately noticed
that one of his miniature water colors
hanging on display was not his work at
all, but the work of an art forger—albeit
an extremely talented art forger. After
months of undercover work, Beverly Hills
police arrested Mark Henry Sawicki, owner
of the Sherman Oaks art gallery Visual
Environments, for dealing in forged miniature
Yamagatas. Police executed a search warrant
on Sawicki’s home and gallery, where
they seized original paintings and purported
limited-edition lithographs signed by
Dali, Chagall and Miro.
With police now involved, Sawicki turned,
agreeing to help the authorities gather
evidence against Anthony Tetro, whose
reputation in the Los Angeles art world
as a master emulator/forger had approached
dangerously public levels. Sawicki phoned
Tetro and suggested they meet to discuss,
among other things, the purchase of more
Miro prints. Tetro agreed.
The next day, police mobilized a stakeout
and wiretap outside Tetro’s skin-and-suede
condo, and monitored his and Sawicki’s
conversations electronically. Minutes
after Sawicki’s departure, gendarmes
stormed inside Tetro’s home, arrested
him, and confiscated hundreds of pages
crammed with signatures of his favorite
master artists, as well as a forged certificate
of authenticity Tetro still maintains
was not his work, but another’s.
Four months later, Los Angeles District
Attorney Ira Reiner convened a press conference
to announce that Tetro had been charged
with conspiracy to commit grand theft
and sixty-seven counts of forgery. Sawicki
was also charged with grand theft and
forgery, but had already agreed to plead
guilty and cooperate with the authorities
in return for a sentence of probation.
“The forger in his case is the
single largest forger of artwork in the
United States,” Reiner said. “He’s
been in business for a long time.”
An Unbearably Sad Thing
There’s something about a fifty-year-old
man living in a hotel room that’s
unbearably sad. And like most unbearably
sad things, it seems incredibly elusive
and complex. Consider the room Tetro has
lived in for the past four years. There’s
a small refrigerator and George Foreman
grill in one corner, in the other corner
a life-size sculptured mannequin intricately
painted by artist Jose Pyrumarti, and
pictures of his granddaughters scattered
about. But it’s his “wordly”
possessions, crammed into a small closet
and several drawers, and the constantly
drawn curtains that are unbearably sad,
as if the guy hasn’t opened a window
to the world in a very long time. But
here’s the thing: Tetro doesn’t
seem to mind. He considers the hotel room
a good value, compared to what he’d
pay for a Newport Beach apartment, and
it’s got maid service, two restaurants
and a view of the harbor. “I could
do a lot worse,” he chuckles. “It’s
just that I don’t make enough money
to live comfortably in this town. Then
again, I’m getting older and it
doesn’t affect me as much.”
This attitude—like Tetro himself,
like his work—seems both admirable
and sort of nuts, considering there are
those in the art-world scene who claim
the guy’s a genius.
Tetro’s arrest for grand theft
and art forgery in 1989 knocked his world
and all its trimmings to the ground. He
was forced to liquidate his assets to
solidify finances for his defense. He
sold his exotic cars, including the Rolls-Royce
Silver Spirit for a bargain $32,000, and
his condo. “I sold everything I
owned and moved into a hotel,” he
says. “I didn’t want to burden
my daughter or anyone else.”
While awaiting trial, Tetro employed
a personal publicist expert in celebrity
repositions “so people wouldn’t
think I’m a drug dealer, anymore.”
He sat down for interviews with several
newspapers and magazines, and for a BBC
documentary, where he came across as brash
and cocky. And even though he suffered,
considerably, a piece of him seemed to
take pleasure in the attention.
At trial, Tetro maintained he never represented
his work as anything other than emulations.
He created paintings for private clients
who wanted works from famous artists but
couldn’t afford originals; other
buyers actually owned original masterworks,
but placed a Tetro emulation on the wall
while the “real thing” languished
in a vault. But nowhere had Tetro indicated
on any of his paintings that they were
reproductions, not even with a stamp or
invisible ink. There wasn’t even
an almost imperceptible flaw in the work
itself to distinguish it from the original.
“My customers wanted these to be
as authentic as possible, and if I had
put 'reproduction’ on the
back, that would have defeated the purpose.”
As for the work he sold to dealers and
galleries, it passed from his hands with
the expectation that purchasers would
be informed the art was not the work of
the credited artists. If the sellers failed
to deliver such information, he says,
that was not his problem.
“If you knew how many times I got
fucked by art dealers,” he says.
“They never paid me up front, I
was always commissioned. They made a fortune
and I got arrested.”
The district attorney’s office
preferred to portray Tetro as a forger.
But to obtain a forgery conviction, the
DA had to prove Tetro painted in the style
of master artists with the intent to trick
unwary buyers. And the DA’s evidence
was questionable—nowhere, for instance,
in his taped conversations with Sawicki,
did Tetro refer to his work as “fakes”
or “forgeries.”
After several days of deliberation, some
jurors were not convinced of Tetro’s
fraudulent intent beyond a reasonable
doubt and a mistrial was declared. The
DA then announced his intention to retry
the case. Tetro had no more assets to
liquidate, and his emulation business
was dead—no one would come near
him. The legal system had succeeded in
draining him of cash, and so, on the eve
of his second trial, Tetro pled no contest
to six counts of forgery, one count of
conspiracy, and one count of attempted
theft. He spent nine months at the Los
Angeles County Sheriff’s station
at San Dimas on a work-furlough program,
teaching high school students, taggers
and gang-bangers how to paint.
“I could have gone back to court,
but I ran out of money,” he says.
“I was in court for four-and-a-half
years. I paid over $2,000 just in parking
fees. One of my attorneys billed me thousands
of dollars for incomplete telephone calls
and then had the gall to abandon me before
my trial started. I didn’t make
a dime during that period. I lived off
what I had, and in the end I was broke.”
New Day, Same Bar
The dress code inside Margaritaville ranges
from corporate-informal to tourist-tropical.
An auburn-haired bartender named Marty
pours Tetro a stiff bourbon-on-the-rocks,
his usual. Tetro smiles, shifts in his
seat, casts an eye at the stack of napkins
on the counter. He grabs one and, with
the Fisher Space pen he keeps in the front
pocket of his faded jeans, begins to practice
the signatures of Chagall and Miro. “There
are things I would have done differently,
looking back in Tetro-spect,” he
says. “I wouldn’t have trusted
so many art dealers. I would have asked
for more money. Remember: for every dollar
I made, someone else made two or three
times that amount. Sure, I could start
over, but it would be foolish. I don’t
have anything to prove. It would be so
much more dangerous for me these days,
and I’m not going to risk it. They
beat me. The best course is to not even
think about it.”
So instead he goes about his days drinking
bourbon, reading engineering magazines,
and creating the occasional “emulation”
for wealthy clients, like the Lincoln
in Dalivision he’s preparing
for a Silicon Valley entrepreneur. He
also still has hundreds of “Chagall”
lithographs that he hocks here and there
for $500 a piece. And yes, his signature
is on the backs of all of them.
“I don’t enjoy painting as
much I used to, but it’s the only
thing I can do,” he admits. “I
just did a Rembrandt with a guy and his
dog, and aged it 400 years. I also painted
an exact copy of the Mona Lisa with my
granddaughter’s face and no cleavage.
It took me about a month. It’s as
good as Leonardo’s. I haven’t
lost it. But what I lack these days is
the passion. Art is just a business to
me now. I don’t even like artists
and I can’t stand art dealers. They
made fortunes off me, and they should
be kissing my ass that I never ratted
on one of them.”
At this moment, somewhere in the world,
in some hushed gallery or opulent private
residence, someone stands enwrapped in
awe and veneration before a Tetro, believing
s/he’s moved by the genius of a
Rembrandt, a Miro, a Dali, a Chagall.
Tetro’s eccentric career challenges
the very essence of commonly received
notions of artistic talent and monetary
value. What does it mean, for instance,
when a Tetro work bearing the name of
Da Vinci is considered priceless, while
the very same Tetro, signed by Tetro,
is shunned as worthless? As Larry Steinman
of the Carol Lawrence Gallery told the
BBC, “there’s probably a Tony
Tetro in every major museum in the world.”