Finding valuable artwork and purchasing valuable artwork are two entirely different things.
I agree entirely -- I was vague for the purposes of sifting-out the halfwits and their undergrad attempts at intellectual stimulation. Thankfully, this forum has you and you chose to respond, and so with your good grace we can proceed on this our
somewhat different level of correspondence. I do hope you return.
In the U.S. (and in many other countries), purchasing artwork or another valuable work (a diary, letters, book, whatever) from the current legal owner gives you ownership, this regardless of whether you buy the work for a pittance or not and from an uninformed seller or not. Many valuable works of art, for example, have been purchased at gargage sales (Ansel Adams photos, a Warhol sketch, a Renoir, Picasso's, a Peter Paul Rubens ...) at garage sale prices, and the works have turned out to be worth millions.
I'm in Australia, and as you would be aware not only do we have the ANZUS Treaty between our two great nations, we also share much of the same freedoms and laws. I therefore saw no harm in posting on a specifically US law-related forum, since much of our laws on such a subject as this would be similar if not exactly the same, and it would give me a good idea where and/or how I might proceed, specifically here in Australia, after getting the figurative
lay of the land, if you will, on the subject. Moreover, I observed that this forum had an active membership, the essential ingredient in exploring a topic, whilst the one here in Australia was quite the opposite.
Finding a work of art, however (and, again, this is U.S. law), depends on the laws of the state in which the artwork was found. In many states, a finder must make a concerted effort to find the owner of the artwork - and this often requires under state law in turning the work over to the police, who will hold the work for X amount of time. If the owner cannot be located or does not turn up to claim the work, the finder can then claim the work as his/her own.
Firstly, let me say that it was highly perceptive of you to make the distinction between literally finding a work of art, and simply
finding it at a garage sale for a pittance, in my OP. Again, I was being vague for the purpose earlier expressed, and you have really inspired me to work this scenario from more angles and at greater detail.
In the case of the former form of "finding" you identify, it appears that you infer that an artist's foundation or legal organisation acting on behalf of the dead artist's interests, would hold a very strong legal claim of ownership of a found artwork. For instance:
It was lost, now it is found, it must therefore belong to its natural owner. So, that raises two points of interest worth expanding on:
1.) The location or manner of finding the artwork. I mean, if you bought a house and found the artwork in the basement; then since you bought the house as it came, you essentially own the house and everything in it, even though it wasn't perhaps on the manifest, for instance?
2.) If you were given a bunch of stuff (boxes and suitcases) by a deceased estate and the artwork was found among the contents -- was it still lost?
My main point here therefore, is one where it might even be difficult for the foundation to know the artwork was lost in the first place, when they wouldn't be aware of all the artworks the artist had fashioned expressly as personal gifts. So whilst the work of art might have been found, it hasn't necessarily been lost?
I mean, yes I agree with the proposition that if an artwork features somewhere in the artist's entire catalog of work, and it wasn't stolen, and yet it's missing since no paperwork exists of its handling, then it can be understood to have been lost and a claim of ownership can be handled in the similar way for a stolen artwork. But what if it never made it into the catalog because it was given away or made as a gift for a friend of the artist? Can the foundation identify it as being lost when they cannot prove it was ever part of the body of work completed by the artist? You cannot lose something you don't know you have?
Unless you own the signature? And that's what bothers me about the power of an artist's foundation -- can they own the artist's signature on an artwork they never knew the artist made, and therefore somehow own the artwork?
I realize this raises entirely different issues concerning questions of authenticity. However, for me it's about safeguarding my ownership of the artwork prior to contact with foundation or artist's interests organization.
And, as you recognize, stolen works of art do not belong to the thief or the purchaser of the stolen property but rather to the owner from whom the work was stolen.
Yes, but it would appear that even a lost work of art has a similar force.
Richard Irving, if you reside in the U.S. and provide us with the name of your state, and this is not a hypothetical but a real situation you find yourself involved in, giving us more details can help us help you determine if any artwork you have is legally yours or whether you must jump through some hoops before you can legally claim ownership.
As mentioned previously, I've enjoyed this correspondence with you Quincy, and hope that you might return to keep it going. Thank you for your intelligence and time -- much appreciated!
To the others who posted: Please examine the spirit, if not definition, of what constitutes a forum? Some people just enjoy corresponding on a said topic in an informative and intelligent manner, and so therefore perhaps you might be less inclined in being so dismissive about this forum's functions. This is just a suggestion, so please don't get into a huff about it.
Regards,
Rich