There Are No Fakes Explained

There Are No Fakes
Director:Jamie Kastner
Producer:Jamie Kastner
Laura Baron Kastner
Starring:Kevin Hearn
Music:Kevin Hearn
Cinematography:Derek Rogers
Editing:Michael Hannan
Studio:Cave 7 Productions
Distributor:Mongrel Media
Runtime:113 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English

There Are No Fakes is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Jamie Kastner and released in 2019.[1] Starting with musician Kevin Hearn's lawsuit against the Maslak McLeod Gallery after being informed that a Norval Morrisseau painting he had purchased appeared to be a forgery,[2] the film expands into an exposé of a significant art fraud ring that has produced many fake Morrisseau paintings through the use of forced child labour in sweatshops, in which some of Morrisseau's own surviving family members are complicit;[3] by some estimates, there may be up to 10 times as much fake Morrisseau art on the market as real work.[4]

At the time of the film's release, Hearn's lawsuit had been dismissed by the courts on the grounds that he could not definitively prove that the painting was fake; in September 2019, the decision was overturned by the Ontario Court of Appeal, which awarded Hearn $60,000 on the grounds that the legal onus was actually on the gallery owner to prove that the painting was real, which he also could not do.[5]

The film premiered at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in 2019.[6] It received selected other theatrical screenings through 2019, including at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, the Glenbow Museum in Calgary and the Thunder Bay Art Gallery in Thunder Bay.[7] It had its television premiere on TVOntario on February 1, 2020.[8]

Reception

Critical reception to the film was varied. The Winnipeg Free Press says that despite being "overly long" at points, it is "a stunning picture of colonial exploitation and stolen Indigenous patrimony".[9] The Globe and Mail described There Are No Fakes as "a shocking tale of counterfeit art, sexual abuse and colonialist exploitation."

L.A Hawbaker offered in their review for PopMatters that Kastner uses There Are No Fakes to emphasize the fact that those benefitting from Morriseau's work were white men.[10] They then go on to say that "the crimes that took place at the Bingwi reserve are just a small sampling of the societal harm done to indigenous populations in Canada".

In 2023, the Ontario Provincial Police filed for a court order demanding that Kastner turn over all of the film's raw footage in order to assist in their investigation.[11]

Awards

!Award!Date of Ceremony!Category!Nominees!Result!Reference
Canadian Screen AwardsMay 20, 2021Biography or Arts Documentary Program or SeriesJamie Kastner, Laura Baron Kastner, Mark Anthony Jacobson[12]
Editorial ResearchLaura Baron Kastner, Allya Davidson, Joanne Loton
Photography in a Documentary Program or Factual Series Derek Rogers
Editing in a Documentary Program or SeriesMichael Hannan
Direction in a Documentary Program or SeriesJamie Kastner
Writing in a Documentary Program or SeriesJamie Kastner
Banff Rockie AwardsJune 14, 2021Documentary and Factual - Arts and EntertainmentCave 7 Productions[13]

Notes and References

  1. Dorothy Woodend, "Forgery, Drugs, Money and Art: Documentary Dives into Legacy of Norval Morrisseau". The Tyee, June 14, 2019.
  2. Alison Gillmor, "Canadian doc offers dark take on art fakes". Winnipeg Free Press, August 15, 2019.
  3. Chris Knight, "The story of Norval Morrisseau's contested art is as riveting as it is complicated in There Are No Fakes". National Post, June 12, 2019.
  4. Ken Eisner, "Drugs, abuse, and an art hoax converge in There Are No Fakes". The Georgia Straight, June 12, 2019.
  5. Adam Wallis, "Barenaked Ladies guitarist awarded $60K after buying fake painting". Global News, September 4, 2019.
  6. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder-bay/there-are-no-fakes-morrisseau-1.5114954 "'So many wild twists and turns': film explores alleged forgery of thousands of Norval Morrisseau works"
  7. Andrew Parker, "Review: There Are No Fakes". TheGATE.ca, June 12, 2019.
  8. Paola Loriggio, "Barenaked Ladies’ Kevin Hearn bought a ‘Norval Morrisseau’ painting and ended up in the middle of an art-world feud". Toronto Star, January 31, 2020.
  9. News: Gillmor . Alison . 2019-08-15 . Aug 2019: Canadian doc offers dark take on art fakes . en-CA . . 2022-04-06.
  10. News: . Hawbaker . L.A. . What Is Real in Jamie Kastner's Art Doc There Are No Fakes? . PopMatters . 14 June 2021 .
  11. Jamie Kastner, "In the Morrisseau art fraud case, police should let documentary filmmakers do our jobs – and that includes protecting footage". The Globe and Mail, March 9, 2023.
  12. Brent Furdyk, "Television Nominees Announced For 2021 Canadian Screen Awards, ‘Schitt’s Creek’ Leads The Pack With 21 Nominations". ET Canada, March 30, 2021.
  13. Web site: Rockie Awards ★ nominees ★. 2021-06-23. rockies.playbackonline.ca.