digestdot.com digestdot.com
Search:    Site Home -> About Us -> Security & Privacy -> ToS -> Add Url -> Submit Article   
Add Url
 

Property & Estate

Education & Learning

Automotive

Online & Indoor Games

Culture & Art

Jobs & Careers

Finance & Banking

Society & Communities

Eating & Drinking

Home Family & Garden

Online Shopping

Relationship & Lifestyle

Sports

Teens & Kids

Science & Research

Issues & News

Travel & Accommodation

Self Management

Entertainment

Law & Politics

Medical Care

Health & Hygiene

Internet & Computers

Business & Services

 

  Site Home » Culture & Art » Impressionist Art
   
 

The Art of Faking Art

   

It would seem that all art is not truth. Three fake Mona Lisas have been made and sold. The Tate Gallery in London discovered that their archives were tampered with and false documents inserted to "prove" fake works. Just recently, Italian police uncovered more than ten million dollar's worth of fake art sales. Even more disturbing was a former director of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art declaring that almost half of the paintings sold on the market are forgeries or semi-forgeries. It seems that fake art has made its own supply and demand and art experts are raking handsome fees for "fakebusting" services.

Vermeer once remarked that as long as there is art, there would be forgeries. The ugly truth that collectors and museums must face is that copying and forging art are inseparable. Even Greeks and Romans produced reproductions so well that today, it is difficult to separate original Greco-Roman work from their copies. Although many people forge art for money and profit, some people also view art forgery as a twisted complement to the original artist.

There have been many famous forgers throughout history, but none as famous as Henricus Antonius van Meegeren, whose reproduction of Vermeer's Disciples at Emmaus fooled even senior art experts. He proceeded to reproduce and profit from his Vermeer copies to he tune of more than $5 million dollar and only went bankrupt because he confessed to making the forgeries later in his life.

Forging art nowadays has become a relatively easy endeavor, in part due to the evolving techniques of the forgers and in part due to the new technology they use to artificially "age" a painting. Forgers learn the original artist's style and match the color pigments he used on his canvasses. Then they create the work using the original artist's brush stroke patterns. Art forgery has even gone as far as inventing new artists with corresponding fake biographies to sell a whole line of artwork. Some art forgery circles have even adopted sophisticated fraud modus operandi that involved inserting professional-looking catalogues and documents into museum archives like the Tate, where ironically, experts go to authenticate art.

Fakebusters, on the other hand, rely on forensic science and police investigators to determine the authenticity of an art piece. They analyze fractions of fingerprints or palm prints that forgers leave on the painting surface, then scan the work with x-rays and UV light (black light) to determine the use of modern fluorescent paint. They analyze the composition of the paint used by the artist by using chromatography, after which a color "fingerprint" of the artist can clearly come through. The process is usually long and slow.

Despite the abundance of fakes on the art market, most buyers do not show any signs of slowing down. This persistent demand has even opened a niche for painters selling "legal" fakes. Customers who patronize these honestly forged paintings are the type who would want to spend a thousand dollars for a painting that looks like the original rather than spend millions on a piece that might turn out fake in future. Forging painters claim that there are many big-name collectors and celebrities who knowingly buy fakes now. What seems to be the most interesting is how well the whole system of fake art survived the crackdowns and how the art business has tolerated the massive amount of frauds that has infiltrated museums and private collections all over the world. A Christie's art specialist calls it "a very, very clever, even artful scheme".

Author: Michael Russell
 
Author Bio:

Michael Russell

Michael Russell has been involved in online business since early 2001, and whilst spending countless hours each month running his business still finds time for various hobbies and interests.

This article can be searched using: french impressionists, impressionists paintings, american impressionists
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
The Building of the Pentagon
 
How to buy a pawn shop guitar the safe way
 
Emerging Band Series: Blue October
 
Freelance Writers: To Make More Money, Keep Your Clients Happy
 
Use Your Ebay Store To Double Your Sales
 
Guitar Lessons Online
 
A Recipe for Contentment: Kids, Creativity and Clay
 
3 Ways To Get The Most Out Of Your Music Lessons
 
To Think for Oneself
 
Revealing Secrets to Book Review Writing
 
 
 
 
 

Emerging Band Series: Blue October

Blue October is a rock band from Houston, Texas. The group was formed in 1996 by Justin Furstenfeld, ... - James Keam
 

Art-Science For The Proper Life

Maybe soon science and the instinctive wisdom of human kind will merge into something uniform like a ... - Willie Krut
 

Do You Want Your Articles to be Read? Do This

The titles of your articles should invite further attention, not a yawn. It may take a little more t ... - Georganne Fiumara
 
 

How Any Copywriter ?C Even a Beginner ?C Can Assemble and Present a Winning Portfolio

Why having a portfolio is so important and how you can assemble a winning one, even if youre a begin ... - Chris Marlow
 

Dewey and Me

No, not Dewey of the TV show "Malcolm and Me". Not Melvil Dewey, the originator of the Dewey Decimal ... - Robert Rickover
 
 
Site Home -> Security & Privacy -> ToS
© 2006-2008 www.digestdot.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.