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ART EXPERTS IN THE EYE OF A CYCLONE By Adrian Darmon
12 April 2012
Catégorie : Focus
Cet article se compose de 7 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Another disturbing aspect regarding authentications has come to light a few years ago when experts who passed away have been replaced by specialists who have gone against their opinions, going as far as to rehash their Catalogues Raisonnés completely. This has occurred with the French artist André Lhote after the death of Jean Gouin, his heir who was acting as the main expert due to the fact that he was the beneficiary of the latter's moral rights. His children being reluctant to take his role over, Jean Gouin was then succeeded by Dominique Berman-Martin, a cousin of Lhote who then caused the anger of several collectors in rejecting many paintings authenticated by her predecessor after she claimed that he had made too many blunders.

Many owners of art works have therefore been not assured of the authenticity of their pieces when confronted to experts who have revised the opinions delivered by their predecessors while others have been experiencing difficulties with some influential people exerting their powers on the market.

Recently a collector who bought a rediscovered bronze sculpture believed to have been made by Constantin Brancusi, the famous 20th Century Romanian artist, met problems with the art company capping the experts of the artist. When asked to lend his piece for examination he however declined to sign a contract as it contained a clause stipulating that this company would not be held responsible if the sculpture happened to be lost or stolen. As a result of his refusal, this collector found himself at a loss about how to have his sculpture examined and eventually authenticated.

Some experts are also well-established dealers whose authority gives them formidable powers meaning that the monoply they enjoy over the production of an artist can sometime lead them to deliver biased opinions likely to anger collectors.

Finally, experts –and also auction houses- have had a growing tendency to rely more and more on the provenance of a piece they are requested to examine rather than on its true quality. However, it is hard to understand why they still hold modern technologies in contempt when it comes to decide whether or not a work is genuine.

A few years ago, a Paris-based American collector showed his interest in a much elaborate work on vellum  representing Maria-Bianca Sforza, which was to be auctioned by Christie's as an anonymous German 19th Century portrait but he was outbid at 18000 USD by an American dealer who eventually failed to obtain a firm opinion about it. Years later, the collector luckily managed to buy the work back from the New York dealer and went on to call upon a Paris laboratory in order to carry on an extensive examination via X rays and other  elaborate analyses which eventually proved that the work had been executed by Leonardo da Vinci himself especially as his fingerprints had been discovered on it. Now this stupendous rediscovery has been estimated at over 100 million USD.

Such incredible finding proved that experts and auction houses were from time to time exposed to making serious mistakes as that was the case of Charles Avery, the famous Renaissance expert working for Christie's, who in the early 1990s estimated for a mere 5000 USD a marble sculpture found in the garden of a Scottish property. In fact the sculpture fetched over 5 million USD as it happened to be a work by Giambologna, a reknown sculptor working in Italy during the second part of the 16th Century.

Two years ago, an important Paris-dealer who at an antique fair had bought for some 200 000 USD a terracotta sculpture representing Saint Sebastian also managed to have it authenticated as a true Da Vinci work after submitting it to the same laboratory which had examined the above mentioned work on vellum. This time, dozens of the artist's fingerprints were found on that sculpture after comparisons were made with those found in the Vatican's archives.

Resorting to analyses made by well equipped laboratories would be the best solution for experts when they have difficulties to forge a firm opinion regarding a work of art with unknown provenance or which might look at first dubious. However, specialists have rather been rather reluctant to rely on new technologies so far. One must say that such attitude seems to be way behind modern times as if they would prefer to travel in a carriage drawn by horses instead of boarding a high speed railway train like any human being of the 21st Century.

Adrian Darmon


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