The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Former Cupar antiques dealer in Vettriano fraud trial.

Fife man faces charges of stealing and defrauding 44 customers over 11 years

- JAMIE BEATSON

An antiques dealer sold a customer an early Jack Vettriano painting for £17,000 despite its actual value only being a fraction of that sum.

Kenneth Robb – who formerly ran Kingdom Antiques in Cupar – faces charges of stealing from and defrauding a total of 44 customers between January 2005 and July 2016.

In one charge it is alleged he sold a painting to Louise Seymour for a vastly inflated value, having told her she was getting it at a discount.

Dundee Sheriff Court yesterday heard the painting concerned was signed by Jack Hoggan, Vettriano’s birth name which he used on his early work before turning profession­al.

Art expert Sandro Paladini, who studied art history with the prestigiou­s Christie’s auction firm before taking over his father’s Eduardo Allessandr­o gallery in Dundee, told the court he was asked to value the painting by Mrs Seymour after she had bought it.

She earlier told how she had bought it for £17,000 having been told by Robb it was worth £25,000.

Mr Paladini told the court: “It was a painting signed Jack Hoggan – the real name of the painter more commonly known as Jack Vettriano.

“The early paintings by that artist were Victorian pastiches, often copied out of books and tend to be children or figures in Victorian or period dress in a landscape setting.

“Mrs Seymour contacted me to value the painting after purchasing it.

“I used my own knowledge to do that as well as showing it to Nick Curnow, one of the directors of the Edinburgh auction firm Lyon and Turnbull.

“I looked at the painting – that artist’s early works are not particular­ly valuable.

“They are fairly minor within the trade and by no means are they valued in the same financial bracket as those after he had changed his name.

“They commonly sell for under £1,000 at auction.”

Mr Paladini told the court he would expect it to fetch between £500 and £800 at auction and that it should be insured for no more than £1,000.

Robb is alleged to have repeated the painting fraud trick on August 15 2011 at the shop on Bonnygate, Cupar, allegedly telling Josephine Donnelly that a painting in his shop was valued at £6,500, but that he would sell it to her at a discounted price of £4,500.

Prosecutor­s say the true value was only £500 and that he obtained £4,500 from her by fraud. Miss Donnelly is due to give evidence later in the trial.

Robb, 73, of Blalowan Gardens, Cupar, denies 44 charges of theft and two of fraud on summary complaint.

The trial continues.

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