Italian police raid Dali exhibition, say works on display were fake

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Carabinieri officers hold one of the 21 artworks presumed to be inauthentic and falsely attributed to Salvador Dali, seized during an exhibition in Parma following an investigation by the Rome Public Prosecutor's Office, in Rome, Italy, in this handout picture obtained on October 1, 2025. Carabinieri/Handout via REUTERS    THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY

Carabinieri officers hold one of the 21 artworks presumed to be inauthentic and falsely attributed to Salvador Dali, seized during an exhibition in Parma.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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ROME - Italy's art heritage police said on Oct 1 they raided a Salvador Dali exhibition and seized 21 works attributed to the famous Spanish surrealist painter that are presumed to be forgeries.

Officers took tapestries, drawings, engravings and various objects from the "Salvador Dali: Between Art aAnd Myth" show which opened last week in the northern city of Parma, the Carabinieri said in a statement.

Palazzo Tarasconi, the venue hosting the Parma exhibition, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The ticketing office said the exhibition would continue despite the seizures.

Police said they acted on suspicions first raised by the Gala-Salvador Dali Foundation – the body tasked with protecting the artist's legacy – and spotted “anomalies” while the artworks were on display in Rome.

The exhibition, comprising around 80 artworks, ran in the Italian capital from January to July.

It reopened in Parma on Sept 27, and was scheduled to continue until Feb 1.

The Carabinieri stressed that the artworks were presumed fake on the basis of preliminary investigations, and that the presumption of innocence would apply until a final verdict is reached.

Italy's Carabinieri police has specialised units working on stolen or forged art.

They said in 2024 they had uncovered a large-scale pan-European forgery network making and selling fakes attributed to some of the biggest names in modern and contemporary art including Banksy, Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol and Dali. REUTERS

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