Nicky Philipps, a portrait artist renowned for her pictures of the royal family, has asked the Fake or Fortune team to investigate a painting believed it to be by celebrated impressionist Pierre Auguste Renoir.
Charles Henty has been left with a working farm to run in France and a crippling inheritance tax bill to pay. The only way he can do that is by selling two paintings he owns - if he can prove they're genuine.
A beautiful church in the heart of the Lancastrian countryside has for over 200 years been home to a possible 16th-century Italian Old Master. But it is also at the centre of an unusual mystery. (Final)
This series begins with a seemingly impossible mission - can the team prove that a painting of a man in a black cravat is one of the first pictures ever painted by Lucian Freud, even though Freud himself denied painting it?
The team are on the trail of what could be a long lost masterpiece by French painter Paul Delaroche. Could the picture have been a treasured possession of Marie Amelie, the last Queen of France?
Alice Thoday inherited a rare watercolour from her mother. If a genuine Auguste Rodin, it could be worth over 100,000 - but the trouble is, Rodin is one of the world's most faked artists.
The team seek to find out the truth about three mystery portraits, one of which might be an early work by modern artist Willem de Kooning. The hunt for evidence takes them to Berlin, Miami and Belgium. (Final)
Fake or Fortune? returns for a sixth series as art detectives Philip Mould & Fiona Bruce investigate more thrilling cases of art world mystery. In this episode they take on one of the most important cases they've ever faced.
Fiona Bruce and the team come down under for their first Australian investigation. Can they prove an online purchase from an English auction site is a lost work by Tom Roberts, considered one of Australia's greatest artists.
Philip Mould, Fiona Bruce and the team are on the trail of two pictures brought to their attention by viewers, both believed to be by Paul Gauguin - one of the giants of 19th-century art. (Final)
Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould investigate more cases of art world mystery, intrigue and deception. Is a still life painting by William Nicholson bought in 2006 for 165,000 real or an elaborate fake?
The owner of two sketchbooks found in a shed in France ask Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould to help prove they are the work of a young Toulouse Lautrec.
In this episode, the team investigates whether a small watercolour sketch could be the work of the great British 20th century sculptor Henry Moore.
Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould investigate two rare portraits of black British subjects from the 18th and 19th centuries.
The Fake or Fortune team investigate their first piece of sculpture as they try and prove that a strikingly abstract piece of plaster is a missing work by Alberto Giacometti, one of the world's greatest sculptors. (Final)
The team investigate an 18th century landscape that could be a lost work by of one of the biggest names in British art, Thomas Gainsborough. Will they be able to convince an expert that it is a landscape by the great artist?
The team investigate an 18th century family portrait. The owners believe it's the work of the pioneering woman artist Maria Cosway, but could it be an undiscovered portrait by the great Regency artist Sir Thomas Lawrence?
Bought for just 1, a small still-life could be the work of one of the masters of 20th century art: Giorgio de Chirico. Can the team prove this junk shop find is an unearthed treasure?
The team investigates a beautiful 18th century Venetian view. Could this be a work by one of the Italian masters - the highly prized Francesco Guardi or Michele Marieschi? (Final)
Artist Katy B. Plummer takes us to the Hilma af Klint exhibition where she and co-curators Sue Cramer and Nicholas Chambers explain the Swedish artist's work and influence. We also visit the Incognito Art Show in Sydney.