Why Authenticity Should Always Come Before Value
- gerard van weyenbergh
- 14 minutes ago
- 3 min read
The Costly Mistake Many Art Collectors Make
One of the most common mistakes in the art market is assuming that a high value automatically confirms authenticity.
It does not.
Experienced collectors, museums, and sophisticated investors generally follow a simple sequence when evaluating a work of art:
Step One
Establish authenticity.
Step Two
Determine market value.
Step Three
Obtain insurance coverage and documentation.
Unfortunately, many collectors reverse this process.
They obtain an appraisal, see a substantial value attached to the artwork, and assume the question of authenticity has already been resolved.
In the art world, that assumption can become very expensive.
Why Authenticity Comes First
Before a painting, sculpture, or drawing has value, it must have an identity.
A painting attributed to a major artist may be worth hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars if genuine.
The very same object may be worth only a fraction of that amount if the attribution cannot be supported.
The market does not pay for possibilities.
The market pays for evidence.
This is why serious collectors begin with authentication rather than valuation.
At VWART Art Authentication Services, we regularly encounter artworks that have been insured, appraised, inherited, or offered for sale without a proper investigation of authenticity.
In many cases, the valuation was prepared under the assumption that the attribution was already correct.
That assumption is not the same as proof.
The Difference Between Authenticity and Value
Authenticity answers a simple question:
Who created the artwork?
Value answers a different question:
What is the artwork worth today?
The two concepts are closely connected, but they are not interchangeable.
Without accepted authenticity, determining value becomes difficult.
Without value, an authentic artwork may still be important historically, but its financial significance remains uncertain.
For this reason, experienced professionals treat authentication and valuation as separate disciplines.
Why Appraisals Can Be Misleading
Many collectors receive an appraisal and believe they now possess evidence that their artwork is authentic.
In reality, many appraisals contain language indicating that the valuation is based upon the assumption that the attribution is correct.
The appraiser may not have performed:
Provenance research
Scientific analysis
Archive investigation
Catalogue raisonné review
Connoisseurship examination
As a result, the appraisal estimates value without necessarily proving authorship.
This misunderstanding is one of the most common issues discussed throughout the VWART Blog.
The Importance of Documentation
Once authenticity has been established and value determined, documentation becomes essential.
Collectors should maintain:
Authentication reports
Provenance records
Purchase invoices
Insurance schedules
Condition reports
Photographic archives
These documents help protect the artwork's marketability and facilitate future sales, inheritance transfers, insurance claims, and museum considerations.
Proper documentation can significantly influence both liquidity and long-term value.
A Real-World Example
Imagine a family inherits a painting accompanied by an appraisal from twenty years ago showing a value of $500,000.
Naturally, the heirs believe the painting is worth that amount.
Years later, the artwork is presented to a major auction house or museum.
Questions arise regarding authenticity.
Further research reveals gaps in provenance and concerns regarding attribution.
Suddenly, the appraisal becomes secondary.
The focus shifts entirely to establishing authorship.
The value that once appeared secure may change dramatically.
This situation occurs more often than many collectors realize.
The Smart Collector's Approach
Professional collectors understand that value is the result of authenticity, not the proof of it.
The safest sequence remains:
1. Authenticate the artwork.
2. Determine market value.
3. Obtain insurance and maintain documentation.
Following this process reduces risk, improves transparency, and provides a stronger foundation for future transactions.
Final Thoughts
In the art market, authenticity creates value.
Value does not create authenticity.
The most successful collectors understand this distinction and build their collections accordingly.
Before relying on an appraisal, ask whether the artwork's attribution has been independently verified.
That single question may protect you from costly mistakes and unrealistic expectations.
To learn more about authentication, provenance research, appraisal services, and collector advisory work, visit VWART.com or contact us through our Contact Page.
Gerard Van WeyenberghArt Expert • Authentication SpecialistAdvisor to Collectors, Estates, Attorneys, Museums, and Investors

