Description
Author: Casement William
Package Dimensions: 0x0x788
Number Of Pages: 304
Release Date: 15-02-2022
Details: Product Description
Forgery is a provocative presence in the art world that captures attention in the press and inspires books about the exploits of famous fraudsters as well as scholarly articles and monographs. But missing until now has been a big-picture look at the phenomenon of art forgery. The Many Faces of Art Forgery provides a unique treatment that features historical highlights, philosophical insights, psychological profiles, economic theories, and legal statutes and cases.
Key features woven into the author’s presentation include:
The story of art forgery from antiquity to the present, including 80 named forgers, the tricks of their trade, and the social forces that ensure the existence of their enterprise.
How scientific analysis is both effective and limited in exposing art fakes.
Multiple definitions for the term “forgery” as applied to art.
The effect on authenticity in legal terms, philosophical terms, and public opinion when an artwork undergoes extensive restoration, or artists hire surrogates to make their works, or they appropriate images from other artists or styles from indigenous cultures.
Forgers’ mentalities: their motivations, rationalizations, and strategies.
The ethics of art forgery: from criminality to esteem for fooling experts.
The possibility and aesthetic worth of a “perfect fake.”
In all, readers will understand the substantial place forgery occupies in the realm of art, as well as that what constitutes authentic versus inauthentic is not always clear-cut, nor are legal and moral judgments about forgery. In conveying this message, the author provides a wealth of scholarly content and interesting anecdotes in an accessible and engaging style suitable for experts and general readers alike.
Review
“Forgery is not everywhere in the art world, but the uncomfortable reality is that it can be anywhere,” writes former art dealer Casement in this illuminating survey. Just as beauty is thought to be in the eye of the beholder, Casement argues the concept of authenticity can also be interpreted subjectively and culturally. To that end, he takes a fascinating look at the long history of art forgery, from ancient Roman times—when “exorbitant prices” driven by avid collectors (including Caesar) led artisans to produce numerous copies “fashioned after Greek masters”—up to the present, when an unprecedented number of fakes flood the market (with the art of 17th-century French painter Corot being a favorite target). Casement uses forgery as a lens through which to ask striking questions of greed, acquisitiveness, duplicity, racism, and other aspects of human frailty…. This serves as a potent reminder that caveat emptor remains in full force today. ―
Publishers Weekly
Based on deep scholarship across a remarkably broad field, yet written with a light touch…a notably excellent book of importance and potentially wide interest. — Lawrence Nees, professor of art history and H. Fletcher Brown Chair of Humanities, University of Delaware
This is an extremely well researched and structured book that does not overlook a single relevant issue in the area of art fraud while presenting the topic in a very accessible way. — Saskia Hufnagel, reader in criminal law, Queen Mary University, London, editor/author The Palgrave Handbook on Art Crime
Takes the reader on a provocative and highly informative trek through the world of art fraud, profiling cases and bad actors and controversial perspectives on authenticity. — Robert K. Wittman, retired FBI special agent, founder and former senior investigator, FBI National Art Crime Team, and author of the New York Times Best Seller Priceless: How I Went Undercover to Rescue the World’s Stolen Treasures
Provides a truly panoptic yet readable insight into the multi-faceted ‘discipline’ of art forgery, through the eyes, and with the anecdotal colour, of a seasoned and experienced art professional. — Claude Piening, senior international specialist
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