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Book of the Week

stacey_mb
6 years ago
last modified: 6 years ago

The forger’s spell : a true story of Vermeer, Nazis, and the
greatest art hoax of the twentieth century
/ Edward Dolnick.

I became interested in reading about art forgery after
encountering Breaking van Gogh : Saint-Remy, Forgery, and the $95 million fake
at the Met
by James Ottar Grundvig. The author gives a fascinating argument of why he believes that the work
"Wheat Field with Cypresses," currently hanging at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York, is a fake. One of the many
reasons he mentions is that the Met refuses to release its condition report on
the painting. This analysis would
identify, for one, the type of paint and whether it matches the custom made
paints that van Gogh used for his work.

According to The Forger’s Spell, a previously unknown work by Vermeer was discovered in the 1930s. It was shown to art experts in France who said
it was a “rotten forgery.” However, in
Holland there was great excitement over the discovery of this rare gem and art
critics worldwide, including from Time magazine, expressed gushing
admiration for its beauty. Several more
Vermeers turned up and were declared to be equally as beautiful. It was only a fluke discovery that led to the
real creator of the paintings, who was brilliant in the way he pulled off this
feat and fooled so many experts in the art world. Ironically, he had submitted paintings under his own name but they were rejected as being poor art.

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