Chinese Court Orders Artist Ye Yongqing to Pay More than $670,000 for Plagiarism Scandal

This post was originally published on artnews.com

A Chinese appeals court upheld a previous ruling requiring Chinese artist Ye Yongqing to pay €650,000 ($670,469) in damages and issue an apology in a major Chinese newspaper within ten days for plagiarizing the work of Belgian artist Christian Silvain. According to Artdependencethe court also warned that failure to comply with the ruling could result in Ye’s imprisonment. 

The decision marks the conclusion of a five-year legal battle that began in 2019 when the striking similarities between Ye’s work and Silvain’s were exposed in a Belgian newspaper, Het Nieuwsblad.

Christian Silvain, now 74, expressed relief, describing the ruling as the end of a long struggle to obtain acknowledgment of Ye’s plagiarism. Silvain plans to use the compensation to pay legal fees and collaborators. 

Ye, a former art school professor and celebrated artist, has faced significant consequences since the plagiarism accusations surfaced. He has not held an exhibition since 2018, was dismissed from his university position, and saw his works removed from several museums. The scandal severely damaged his reputation and provoked protests from students and criticism from art experts.

Ye amassed a fortune exceeding $15 million from the sale of plagiarized works, with individual pieces fetching more than $600,000 at auction. His prominent collectors included Bill Gates and Rupert Murdoch. The revelations caused outrage in the Chinese art community, with art critic Jia Fangzhou stating that Ye’s actions “humiliated all of Chinese modern art.” 

Some museums have even replaced Ye’s pieces with Silvain’s in response to the scandal.

Silvain’s case marks the first time a foreign artist has won a plagiarism case against a Chinese artist in a Chinese court. 

“I believe this will make people in China think twice before copying someone else’s work,” Silvain said.