The Art of the Steal

2009 Documentary

Born into a working-class family in Philadelphia, Albert C. Barnes was a man who through hard work and determination became a doctor and medical researcher, founding a successful pharmaceutical firm that made him a multimillionaire. As his fortune grew, Barnes developed a taste for art and in time assembled one of the world's most remarkable private collections, featuring original paintings by Van Gogh, Renoir, Picasso, Cézanne, and many other important artists. Barnes relied on his own instincts rather than the advice of experts when he bought paintings, and he had little use for the pretentious attitudes of Philadelphia's art collectors and high society; the animosity between Barnes and the city's art establishment grew to the point that in 1922 he opened the Barnes Foundation, a private gallery where he kept his collection rather than share it with institutions such as the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Barnes Foundation was open by invitation only, and the doctor preferred to have his collection seen by students and serious art lovers rather than those he felt didn't appreciate the work. Barnes died in 1951, and made strict provisions in his will that his collection was not to be sold, lent to other museums, or removed from the grounds of the Barnes Foundation. Lincoln University, a traditionally African-American college, was appointed to oversee the foundation's collection. But after the death of Barnes' protégée Violette de Mazia in 1988, Lincoln University's trustees took full control of the collection, now estimated to be worth 25 billion dollars, and a number of individuals and organizations inexperienced in the world of art laid hands upon the Barnes archive. The Art of the Steal is a documentary by Don Argott that explores how greed, political power, and good intentions colluded to violate Albert C. Barnes' wishes and scatter his collection across the globe. The Art of the Steal was an official selection at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival. more..

Director: Don Argott

Reviews

  • What is finally clear: It doesn't matter a damn what your will says if you have $25 billion, and politicians and the establishment want it.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    27 April 2013

  • It's memorable when it meditates on the changing face of where we look at art, and how that changes the art itself.

    Owen Gleiberman - Entertainment Weekly

    27 April 2013

  • Despite the unsubtlety of the movie's stance, a dizzyingly complex portrait emerges: that of pissed-off museum neighbors, arrogant critics and even the NAACP's dignified Julian Bond, articulating a racial component.

    Joshua Rothkopf - Time Out New York

    27 April 2013

  • What The Art of the Steal documents most dramatically is the irresistible pull of irreplaceable art.

    Joe Morgenstern - The Wall Street Journal

    27 April 2013

  • The film can be dry and a little repetitive. For all of that, it still manages to generate a surprising measure of suspense and it produces outrage in abundance.

    Pam Grady - Boxoffice Magazine

    27 April 2013

Awards

  • Best Performance by an Ensemble Cast

    Chlotrudis Awards (2011)