Who Is Elmyr? cover art

Who Is Elmyr?

Histories of an Art Forger

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Who is Elmyr?

Simply put, Elmyr de Hory is known by many as the most notorious art forger of all time. He believed that if a forgery hangs in a museum for long enough - as he claimed many of his works did - it eventually becomes real. Yet, as with many fraudsters, much of the myth is exaggeration or invention. Elmyr de Hory claimed he sold hundreds of his forgeries in the 1950s and '60s. It’s possible that many still hang in America’s museums today. With the help of his immense talent, he became known as the greatest art forger of the century, and four decades after his death, his old friend Mark Forgy has become the caretaker of his legacy. Forgy has dedicated himself to celebrating de Hory’s talent and fending off imposters on the internet. But in the process, he learned the hard truth: The story you get is not always the story you want. If a fake painting hangs in a museum for long enough, does it one day become real? If someone you loved was not who you thought they were, is it better not to know?

We tell stories about ourselves, about others, about art. Elmyr de Hory’s story is also the story of the art dealers who spent their careers chasing him, the millionaire who discovered his collection was not what it seemed, the biographer who helped in de Hory’s myth-making only to become a victim of his own fictions. And it is about the young American who would dedicate himself to his friend only to find strange new narratives disrupting the story. If a lie is told enough times, does it one day become real?

And so, who is Elmyr de Hory? He became internationally infamous as the world's greatest art forger, but the stories that lie beneath are more bizarre and surprising. When we examine what we value and why we value them, we might find that a fiction told enough times eventually becomes truth.

©2021 Max Horberry (P)2021 Audible Originals, LLC.
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Cleverly crafted and beautifully narrated. Amusing and full of intrigue, a real page turner! I never thought the art world would be this fascinating

Wow! Fascinating story

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This story made me laugh out loud, moved me near to tears, and left me hungry for more. A real rollercoaster of intrigue on the value of art, the creation of history, of what we hold true, and perhaps most powerfully, of our fragile yearning to believe.

And the story about Irving and Howard Hughes - just wow..!

Very glad I stumbled upon this audiobook - I was gripped throughout.

What a story! Utterly gripping

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Had my head spinning by the end! Great listen, though accents felt a bit forced.
I’m currently binging art forgery stories, and this book is excellent. Would also recommend Caveat Emptor by Ken Perenyi.

Makes you question everything

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What an amazing story, very well written and excellently told by Max Horberry. As soon as I started listening, I was gripped. I finished it in two sessions over two days. Really enjoyed it. Congratulations to the writer and narrator!

Fascinating story, great narration by Max Horberry

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This true story really fits the moniker "stranger than fiction". It's a bizarre, sad and still comic tale of fakery getting so out of hand that even talking about what is "real" anymore seems to be moot.
The reader tries to breathe life into various Hungarians, midwesterners and Europeans by imitating their accents. To say these accents are poor imitations would be an understatement. But perhaps this is only apt for the topic in hand. One more meta-level of fakery surely must be adding to the total, not detracting from it..

Came for the story, stayed for the hilarious accents

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