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COROT FAKES : ABOUT 10,000 THROUGHOUT THE WORLD

Cet article se compose de 3 pages.
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Robaut did not hesitate to blame Corot for having been too lenient in this respect and for having unduly entrusted Prevost with so many of his original works that were eventually sold in June 1897.

He also accused the artist François-Louis Français of having produced several fakes in 1895 and Charles Desavary who was in charge of publishing the photographs of some 600 Corot's works in the Northern French town of Arras.

Robot went on to evoke the «half fakes», those unfinished paintings that some unscrupulous dealers did not hesitate to transform as finished works with the help of forgers.

There was also the trial in 1883 of Paul-Desiré Trouillebert, a talented painter who was known as an imitator of Corot. His works were so much like those of Corot that his signature was rubbed off many times in order to add that of Corot.

During his trial, Trouillebert proved that one of his painting, a landscape of the Poitou region sold eventually as a signed work by Corot, had come out of his studio bearing his signature. However, Robaut accused him of being simply an imitator of Corot as his works, so much deceitful, were being sold at auction as by Corot.

At the end of the 19th century a factory producing forged Corot settled in Ixelles, Belgium, and kept active until World War One. It notably sent 230 forged landscapes to France during the year 1888 alone.

A forger employed in this den admitted that he was receiving 300 francs for each forgery and that Corot's signature and the mark of his usual canvas supplier were added afterwards by the buyer.

Such industry resumed during the First World war at the expense of occupying German troops while fakes enabled to satisfy more than one mystical art collector feeling that kind of ecstasy of believing to be the owner of a Corot or a Rembrandt painting bought for nothing, like the French scientist Michel Chasles who bought in 1860 from the forger Vrain Lucas some 27, 000 faked autographs, notably letters on paper (!) by Ciceron to Atticus, by a doctor called Castor to Jesus or by Caesar to Vercingetorix.

A certain Dr Jousseaume claimed to have acquired between 2,000 and 3,000 paintings and drawings by Corot without paying more than 100 francs for each of these. His collection was exhibited in London in 1928 and sold a few months later in that city and in New York. The catalogue bore a beguiling title : «The paintings and drawings of J.B.C Corot from the artist's own collection». The trick was exposed in the magazine «L'Amateur d'Estampes» in 1929 but the article came unnoticed while many collectors and museums had already bought part of the so-called collection which had been produced by one forger alone.

This collection was also accompanied by a series of autograph letters allegedly written by Corot which contained rather stupid remarks and made believe that the master was a sexual maniac.

It should finally be noted that Corot was partly responsible for the multiplication of fakes due to his carelessness regarding copies to which he added his signature and to his tendency to use assistants to meet a flurry of orders at the end of his life though he was not the only one in the history of painting to do so. However, he went on as far as copying engravings of his works, obtaining reverse replicas, or to paint works over copies produced by imitators.

He also notably retouched works by Dutilleux or by his disciple Georges Rodrigue-Henriquez.

His success came in the 1860's and resulted in the production of some 10,000 fakes after his death making him the most copied painter of all times. It is true that Corot only lived for the love of painting while forgers made a living out of his works and the most interesting conclusion regarding this master and other artists is to note that true art lovers, those who can discern original works from daubs, are not much in numbers when one considers that so many fakes are circulating around the world.
Adrian Darmon


If you wish to submit paintings attributed to Corot, please send e-mail to artcult@wanadoo.fr

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