Separating fact from fiction was always tricky where art forger Elmyr de Hory was concerned. But to Mark Forgy, a young Minnesotan who was backpacking through Europe when they met 40 years ago, the debonair Hungarian was a charming Svengali and father figure who introduced him to film stars and glitterati on the Spanish island of Ibiza, gave him an Old World education in art and culture, and provided a home and work for seven years until De Hory's death, by suicide, in 1976.
Celebrated as the "greatest art forger of our time" in Clifford Irving's 1969 biography "Fake!" and featured in Orson Welles' 1974 documentary "F for Fake," de Hory was -- according to his friend -- hounded to his death by a vindictive former art dealer and authorities intent on extraditing him to France to stand trial for fraud.
After closing De Hory's estate, which he inherited, Forgy returned to Minnesota and settled near Minneapolis, putting his exotic past aside until last month, when the Hillstrom Museum of Art at Gustavus Adolphus College opened an exhibit of about 70 pieces by De Hory; it will be up through April 18.
"I feel compelled to tell Elmyr's story again in my own voice, because in one sense my own story is only important when it's linked to his," said Forgy, who is writing a memoir about his years in Ibiza.
At first glance the Hillstrom show seems a cornucopia of modern masters -- sketches and a few paintings by Picasso, Renoir, Matisse and especially Modigliani, who was De Hory's favorite subject to fake. But only one piece is authentic. Everything else is by De Hory.
One of the prettiest drawings -- a putative Matisse of a dreamy beauty in a peasant blouse -- is on loan from the Saint Louis Art Museum, which was given it as an example of a fake. The authentic Matisse next to it, on loan from the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, is a more angular portrait, with strangely crossed eyes, a too thick neck and ill-proportioned arms. Although it's the real deal, the genuine sketch is not nearly so charming.
"Elmyr's piece has a sureness and facility of line that is quite amazing; there's no hesitancy whatsoever," said Hillstrom director Donald Myers, who organized the exhibit. Myers was introduced to Forgy about six years ago by a colleague in the college's art department who knew Forgy's wife, Alice Doll, a physical therapist. The couple had not shown their unusual collection before, but Myers immediately saw its potential as a teaching tool.
"And it's just such a fascinating story," he said. "Elmyr [pronounced El-meer] is one of those characters you can't forget."