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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forumsartist's award winning art found to be copies of the work of other artists including Basquiat
Her painting that won the Doyles Landscape Art Award last year, Seaside Explorers (main photo), appears to have been copied from the 2011 Nicholas Harding painting, Two Estuary Figures (below).

Two Estuary Figures by Nicholas Harding

Now questions are being asked about a second painting by Ms Allan, Weight of the Minds Periapt (above), which was a finalist in the Darling portrait prize in 2022. It won the Art Handlers award, that came with $2,000 in prize money.
Weight of the Minds Periapt by Ms Allan has similarities with a work by New York artist Jean-Michel Basquiat (right).


Australian artist Jane Allan is facing allegations that she mimicked the work of New York neo-expressionist Jean-Michel Basquiat and British-born Australian artist Nicholas Harding in two paintings that won Australian prizes in recent years.
The Guardian reports that concerns first arose over Allans canvas Seaside Explorers, which won the AU$20,000 (US$13,800) Doyles Art Award for landscape painting in 2025. Australian news platform ABC revealed that Brisbane art dealer Philip Bacon, who represents Hardings estate, had pointed out that the work was a blatant copy of the artists 2011 Two Estuary Figures, with a difference of scale. The original is a minor Harding work, Bacon said, explaining why judges might not have recognized Allans submission as a re-creation.
Jennifer Doyle, a cofounder of the long-running locally known prize, expressed disappointment over the discovery. Why would you do that? said Doyle. If youve got the skill to do it, cant you think of something to paint for yourself?
Following the surfacing of these allegations, the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra, Australia, announced that Allans Weight of the Minds Periapt, which was a finalist for the gallerys closely followed Darling portrait prize in 2022 and took home the $2,000 Art Handlers award that year, was clearly influenced by the work of Basquiat. Allans work is similar in composition, style, and content to the New York artists 1982 Untitled (Two Heads on Gold).
Basquiats piece depicts two robot-like figures side-by-side. The figure on the right has spiky hair, a distinctive nose shaped like an upside down T, white outlined features and spindly arms. The other figure appears to be angry, in a pose that is almost zombie-like. The painting has been described by the artists estate as a vibrant, layered piece in which Basquiat [channels] raw energy into two faces that seem to echo and challenge each other, reflecting a sense of duality.
https://www.artforum.com/news/prizewinning-artist-accused-of-copying-jean-michel-basquiat-1234753259/
FalloutShelter
(14,739 posts)Is how the jurors of the competition did not know that these works were derivative without attribution.
I was chairman of the board of a small arts council in NYS , and we often excluded works for this very reason.
The Basquiat derivation is especially obvious.
yardwork
(69,929 posts)I'm reading the article in disbelief. Nobody on the juries did a reverse image search? Nobody noticed that this artists's purported work is wildly different from painting to painting?
And nobody noticed that one of them looks just like Basquiat? I don't know anything about art and even I recognized that.
FalloutShelter
(14,739 posts)It beggars belief. Thoroughly embarrassing.😳
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(15,495 posts)These are experts. My college art 101 taught us to recognize the work of the big 1900 to present artists. The art panel should have recognized that Basquiat at least.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(15,495 posts)FalloutShelter
(14,739 posts)Derivative is too polite a word.
Prairie Gates
(8,656 posts)Surely nobody looked at that who knows anything about art and didn't understand it was referencing Basquiat.
purr-rat beauty
(1,646 posts)...getting looked over as it is a common study (children/people on the beach) but the Basquiat rip-off is too on the nose.