Gallery of Accusations

Gallery owners allege fraud by Thomas Kinkade.

Correction appended.

“Painter of Light” Thomas Kinkade is being accused of hoodwinking investors and leaving them in the dark. While arbiters awarded two former Thomas Kinkade Signature Gallery owners $860,000 this year, other former dealers have claims pending that accuse Kinkade of using his Christian faith to defraud them.

“I take no pleasure in being the one to cast the first stone,” said Norman Yatooma, the attorney representing 25 former dealers from seven states. “But fraud is a terrible thing. It is horrifying when it is done in the name of God. The bottom line is Kinkade has used God for profit.”

Now the FBI is apparently investigating. Though the bureau does not confirm or deny its investigations, Yatooma told CT that agents have contacted him. A few former dealers, speaking anonymously with the Los Angeles Times, confirmed the same. But Thomas Kinkade Company’s CEO, Dan Byrne, denied that federal agents have contacted the Morgan Hill, California–based company and flatly stated that Kinkade has never used Christianity to seduce investors.

“Thom’s faith is simply a fact of who he is,” Byrne told CT. “But it is not part of a business plan or a business presentation.”

At issue, Byrne said, were a few disgruntled investors who failed as gallery operators. “All these plaintiffs owe the company significant sums of money,” he said. And the plaintiffs’ attorney has courted media interest, Byrne said, “to get the company to settle and bring embarrassment and pressure on Thom.”

Controversy has surrounded Kinkade for the past four years, after stock of the company he took public (Media Arts Group) plummeted from a high of $23 a share to less than $3. In 2004, he bought the company back at about $4 a share. Kinkade is now the sole owner.

His paintings are known for their vibrant colors and idyllic settings, their country cottages, chilly creeks, and glowing clouds. “The critics may not endorse me,” the artist told CT in 2000. “But I own the hearts of the people.”

Individual investors run some 500 Kinkade galleries worldwide, with the overwhelming majority in the United States. Signature Galleries, which sell only Kinkade art, cost upwards of $50,000 to open. Media Arts Group required that new owners attend a training conference called “Thomas Kinkade University.” Yatooma said this is where his clients drank “the Kinkade Kool-Aid.”

“Thomas Kinkade University had a revival-like atmosphere. They would close in prayer and join together in worship. Everybody would leave with their head spinning—now sign the dotted line,” Yatooma said. “They thought they were going to make money by sharing the light.”

But other dealers say they weren’t coaxed into investing. “When I hear that, it is almost comical,” said Mike Koligman, who owns four stores and chairs the Thomas Kinkade Signature Gallery Council. “We are in business to make money, and if we aren’t making money, we aren’t in business.”

Still, Christians are eager to support businesses they believe will share God with others, said Stephen Christensen, managing director of the Center for Faith and Business at Concordia University in Irvine, California. “Perhaps we would not do our diligence in counting the cost because the business seems like it would be a good way to advance God’s kingdom.”

Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated when a handful of former Thomas Kinkade Signature Gallery owners filed civil arbitration claims against Kinkade’s privately owned company. Claims were filed more than a year ago, before arbiters awarded two other former gallery owners $860,000 in their dispute with Kinkade. The attorney representing these plaintiffs, Norman Yatooma, said he plans to file four more civil claims soon.

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Other coverage of Kinkade’s dispute has included:

Painter Said to Be Focus of FBI Probe (Los Angeles Times, Aug. 29)

Complaints Rise Against Kinkade Art Company (All Things Considered, NPR, Aug. 30)

Christianity Today‘s earlier coverage of Thomas Kinkade includes:

Darkness Looms for ‘Painter of Light’ | Economic struggles and criticism smudge Thomas Kinkade’s work (Apr. 17, 2002)

The Kinkade Crusade | “America’s most collected artist” is a Christian who seeks to sabotage Modernism by painting beauty, sentiment, and the memory of Eden. (Dec. 8, 2000)

The Artist as Prophet | What is Christian art, and what does it look like? A Christianity Today editorial (Dec. 8, 2000)

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

News

Looking for God in Russia: Finding Jesus in Orthodox Robes and Evangelical Jeans

God's Word in an Old Light

The New Context of World Missions

Reviewed by Jim Reapsome

News

Long-Distance AIDS Ministry

Jim Thomas

Plethora of Talent

Rx for Recidivism

Interview by Rob Moll

Middle East Morass

Behold, the Global Church

Brenda Salter McNeil

Stopping Cultural Drift

Dreaming of Dystopia

Reviewed by John Wilson

Imagining a Different Way to Live

Ragan Sutterfield

A Good Death

'Mrs. Hunter's Happy Death' reviewed by Rob Moll

Editorial

Look at All the Lonely People

A Christianity Today Editorial

Into the Silent Land

Reviewed by Patricia Raybon

A Practical Understanding of Jesus' Life

Reviewed by Gary M. Burge

Shoot-First Apologetics

Richard J. Mouw

How God Works Through Ordinary Churches

Reviewed by Howard A. Snyder

Worth Protecting

Editorial

Theocracy, Anyone?

A Christianity Today Editorial

No Theocracy Here

Douglas LeBlanc reviews 'Believers'

Meet the Patriot Pastors

Nate Anderson

Autumn

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

News

Races to Watch: Tammy Duckworth vs. State Sen. Peter Roskam

Collin Hansen

Children of a Lesser Hope

Races to Watch: South Dakota's Abortion Ban

Collin Hansen

Q&A: Newt Gingrich

Races to Watch: Governor of Michigan

Collin Hansen

Margin of Victory

Collin Hansen with Tony Carnes

News

Passages

High-Impact Leader and Shaker

News

Quotation Marks

The Other <em>Plan B</em>

Reviewed by Lauren F. Winner

News

Morning-After Headache

Sheryl Henderson Blunt

News

Go Figure

Does Islam Need a Luther or a Pope?

News

<em>Christianity Today</em> News Briefs

News

Cutting Out <em>VeggieTales</em>' Core

Bob Smietana

News

Malay Melee

Deann Alford

News

Public Grievance

Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra

Expelling InterVarsity

Sarah Pulliam

Clash of Churches in Lebanon

Peter Lamprecht, Compass Direct

View issue

Our Latest

‘Saint Nicholas Is Our Guy’

A conversation with printmaker Ned Bustard on what traditions teach about the joy of generosity.

Lord Over LinkedIn

Jacob Zerkle

As layoffs mount amid economic uncertainty, lots of us are looking for work. Here’s how to approach the process.

‘A Shot Came Out of Nowhere’

CT reported on the assassination of a president, a Supreme Court ban on Bible-reading in schools, and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

The Bulletin

National Guard Shooting, a Bad Deal for Ukraine, and US War Crimes?

Mike Cosper, Russell Moore

Asylum-seeking paused after shooting tragedy, Russia rejects peace plan, and Hegseth scrutinized for Venezuelan boat attacks.

The 12 Neglected Movies of Christmas

Nathaniel Bell

The quest for a perfect fruitcake, a petty larcenist, and a sly Scottish dramedy should all grace your small screen this season.

News

Amid Peace Talks, Russian Drone Damages Christian School in Kyiv

Ukrainians are wary of any plan that gives Moscow its “Christmas wish list.”

Make Faith Plausible Again

Bryce Hales

A peculiar hospitality can awaken faith in our secular contexts.

Public Theology Project

Russell Moore’s Favorite Books of 2025

CT’s editor at-large recommends a handful of biographies—from Augustine to Robert Frost—along with sci-fi, Stephen King, social media, and more.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube