資料來源: Google Book
The expert versus the object[electronic resource] :judging fakes and false attributions in the visual arts
- 其他作者: Spencer, Ronald D. , MyiLibrary.
- 出版: New York ;Oxford : Oxford University Press 2004.
- 稽核項: xviii, 241 p. :ill. ;24 cm.
- 標題: Art , Forgeries. , Art Forgeries. , Art Expertising. , Expertising. , Electronic books. , Law and art.
- ISBN: 0195349032 , 9780195349030
- ISBN: 0195147359 (Cloth)
- 試查全文@TNUA:
- 附註: Title from e-book title screen (viewed October 16, 2007). Includes bibliographical references and index.
- 電子資源: Connect to MyiLibrary resource
- 系統號: 005250422
- 資料類型: 電子書
- 讀者標籤: 需登入
- 引用網址: 複製連結
The authenticity of visual art has always commanded the attention of experts, dealers, collectors, and the art-minded public. Is it "real" or "original" is a way of asking what am I buying? What do I own? What am I looking at? And today more sophisticated questions are being asked: How is authenticity determined and what weight does this determination have in court? This book of essays proposes to answer those questions. Three lines of inquiry are basic to determining authenticity: a connoisseur's evaluation, historical documentation or provenance, and scientific testing. A connoisseur is an expert who evaluates the "rightness" of a work based on much careful scrutiny of many works by an artist and familiarity with that artist's usual manner of working with materials. In determining provenance, a researcher traces the physical object from the artist through a chain of ownership to the present owner--simple enough in concept, though it assumes that the documentation is not faked or inaccurate. The goal is to ensure that the object is the same one that left the artist's hand. Scientific testing, although sometimes useful, is often longer on promise than result. Dating paint or wood samples, for instance, can show that a painting was made in Rembrandt's lifetime, but it cannot prove that it is by Rembrandt's hand. If expert opinion is divided, and large sums of money are involved, a dispute over authenticity may end up in a court of law, where evaluation of expert opinion evidence can be problematic. The essays in this book clarify the nature of the methods outlined above and explain, based on case law, the present status of authentication issues in court. Contributors include experts from Christie's, London; Sotheby's, New York; and the former director of the Frick Collection; as well as leading art historians and art dealers; an art conservator; a forensic graphologist; a philanthropist and collector; and a specialist in French art law. Their collective knowledge on issues of authenticity will be invaluable for anyone interested in the world of visual art.
來源: Google Book
來源: Google Book
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