Hornak-Spoutz's parents divorced in 1993 when he was nine years old. Following his parents divorce Hornak-Spoutz was raised by his mother, his paternal grandparents and his uncle, Ian Hornak. During the school year he lived in Mount Clemens, Michigan and many summers, and holidays Hornak-Spoutz spent with Ian Hornak at his home and studio in East Hampton, New York and at his home on the Upper-East Side of Manhattan in New York City.[2]
Through his early exposure to the art world via Ian Hornak in New York, Hornak-Spoutz took an interest in art and became his uncle's studio manager in East Hampton at age 16.[2] Elmer Walter Spoutz, Hornak-Spoutz's paternal grandfather who was a prominent Midwestern real estate developer and businessman, died when Hornak-Spoutz was eighteen in 2002 and he became the co-trustee of his grandfather's estate.[2] Later in 2002 when Hornak-Spoutz was nineteen, his uncle Ian Hornak died and Spoutz became the executor of his estate.[2]
In 2003, Hornak-Spoutz opened the Eric I. Spoutz Gallery in the Fisher Building in Detroit, Michigan when he was nineteen years old, which specialized in Photorealist and Hyperrealist artwork.[1][2] One of the early exhibitions of the gallery was, "Lowell Nesbitt: A Retrospective" there in 2004, which was the largest display of the artist's artwork since the artist's death in 1993.[14] Hornak-Spoutz moved to Palm Beach, Florida where he lived in a beachfront penthouse.
In 2013 Hornak-Spoutz opened Gallery 928 at The Westin Cape Coral Resort at Marina Village in Cape Coral, Florida where he exhibited the artwork of contemporary artists and masterworks by Andy Warhol, Joan Miró, Pablo Picasso and others, at one time reportedly having $20,000,000 USD worth of artwork on display.[4][21] The gallery closed in 2014 following the suicide of Hornak-Spoutz's business partner, Theodore Eager in the gallery, and Hornak-Spoutz moved to a penthouse in the Mid-Wilshire District in Los Angeles, California where he opened an online dealership for the sale of blue chip artwork.[6]
HORNAK-SPOUTZ v KAHN. On October 28, 2024, Hornak-Spoutz filed a civil complaint in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Westchester, against American artist, Scott Kahn.[26][27] The complaint alleged a long term close personal friendship and professional relationship between Hornak-Spoutz and Kahn dating to 2011 which included Hornak-Spoutz's longterm representation of Kahn's artwork in Hornak-Spoutz's galleries. One such exhibition referenced was contemporaneously widely publicized in the media at Hornak-Spoutz's gallery in 2014, Gallery 928, at the Westin Cape Coral Resort at Marina Village in Cape Coral, Florida.[4][28][21] Further alleged was that Hornak had arranged the acquisitions of Kahn's artwork into the permanent collections of the Dallas Museum of Art, and the Schmidt Foundation Center for Art and Design at Fort Hays State University, which culminated in a large exhibition of Kahn's work at the Moss-Thorns Gallery of Art at Fort Hays State University in 2024.[29][30][31][32] The complaint alleged that Hornak-Spoutz had, with Kahn's knowledge and consent, made arrangements with Johnathan Crockett, Chairman of Philips Asia, for a $40,000,000 to $60,000,000 USD retrospective exhibition of Kahn's artwork at Philips Asia's headquarters at WKCDA Tower in the West Kowloon Cultural District in Hong Kong.[26][27] The complaint further alleged that following Hornak-Spoutz's having signed an agreement with Philips Asia for the exhibition which secured the time-slot, October 26, 2023 - November 5, 2023, targeting 50 to 60 artworks by Kahn, and following Hornak-Spoutz and Kahn's mutual planning and curation of the exhibition, Kahn, without warning and in close proximity to the opening of the exhibition, terminated and defaulted on the exhibition.[26][27] The complained also alleged that, at Kahn's request, Hornak-Spoutz used Hornak-Spoutz's own personal, professional, and family connections to introduce Kahn to the senior director of the David Zwirner Gallery for the purpose of securing commercial representation of Kahn's artwork at the gallery.[26][27] It was further alleged that Kahn was displeased with his then current representation at the Almine Rech Ruiz-Picasso Gallery in Paris which had prompted Kahn's request to Hornak for transfer to Zwirner.[26][27] Alleged in the complaint, following Hornak-Spoutz's introduction of Kahn to Zwirner, Kahn conspired with Zwirner to circumvent Hornak-Spoutz in the negotiations for obtaining representation in an effort to avoid compensating Hornak-Spoutz.[26][27] The David Zwirner Gallery subsequently announced global representation of Kahn with a November 2024 debut Kahn exhibition at the David Zwirner Gallery in Hong Kong.[26][27][33] The complaint sought $7,500,000 in damages from Kahn to be awarded to Hornak-Spoutz.[26][27]
^ abcdefghiTom Watts, "Harrison Township art dealer is quick study," Macomb Daily, Feb. 15, 2012
^ abcdefghijklmnJameson Cook, "Dual depictions presented of a prominent art dealer gone bad," Macomb Daily, Feb. 14, 2017
^ abStephen Bennett Phillips, "Ian Hornak Transparent Barricades," exhibition catalogue, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Fine Art Program, Washington D.C., 2012
^ abcCharles Runnells, "Gallery 928 brings Picasso, Warhol and other art icons to Cape Coral," The News Press, Feb. 7, 2014
^ abUS v. Spoutz, 16 Cr. 392: Government Sentencing Materials, Feb. 6, 2017
^ ab"Forging Papers to Sell Fake Art," Federal Bureau of Investigation (press release), April 6, 2017
^Department of Justice, "JUSTICE, U.S DEPARTMENT OF. FBI STORY: Leadership, Integrity, Agility, Integration. S.l.: W W NORTON, 2019.
^Patsy Southgate, "Ian Hornak: Creating An Art Apart," East Hampton Star, Nov. 20, 1997
^ ab"Jay Wolf, 47, Producer, Casting Director and Agent," New York Times, June 14, 1976
^ ab"Papers of Jay Wolf, Circa 1900 - 2009," Dartmouth College Rauner Special Collections Library
^"Downtown Gallery records, 1824-1974, bulk 1926-1969," Smithsonian Institution, Archives of American Art
^U.S. v. Spoutz Complaint - US Department of Justice, Jan. 16, 2016
^"Michigan Art Dealer Arrested And Charged With Fraud For Selling Dozens Of Forged Artworks Over Five Years," Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of New York, Feb. 3, 2016
^"Michigan Art Dealer Sentenced To More Than 3 Years In Prison For Defrauding Collectors Of $1.45 Million Through Sale Of Forged Artworks," Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of New York, Feb. 16, 2017
^Alex Johnson, "Art Dealer Eric Spoutz Charged With Selling Dozens of Fakes of American Masters," NBC News, Feb. 3, 2016
^Meg Wagner, "Michigan art dealer arrested for selling fake paintings by American masters with forged letters of authenticity," New York Daily News, Feb. 4, 2016
^Nate Raymond, "Michigan art dealer arrested by FBI for selling forgeries," Reuters, Feb. 3, 2016
^Lia Eustachewich, "Art dealer con man allegedly sold dozens of forged pieces over 15 years," New York Post, Feb. 4, 2016
^"Michigan art dealer gets more than 3 years in prison for fraud," The Detroit Free Press, Feb. 16, 2017
^Nate Raymond, "Michigan art dealer gets 3-plus years in prison for forgeries," Reuters, Feb. 16, 2017
^"Art Dealer Sentenced to More Than Three Years in Prison for Selling Forged Modern Art," Art Forum, Feb. 20, 2017