but you can’t prove originals,
so said Stefan Simon, a scientist who specializes in
authenticating ancient works, I have taken this from an admittedly
old newspaper article, only
because it ties in neatly with a
Listverse article I was reading today that was published yesterday regarding
fakes and forgeries in the art world, one of the 10 featured works in the
article is the bust of Nefertiti, it is claimed it is a fake, I have
reprinted this from the article,
“Suddenly we had in our hands the most alive Egyptian
artwork. You cannot describe it with words. You must see it.” So wrote the
archaeologist Ludwig Borchardt in his diary shortly after his team unearthed
the famous bust of Nefertiti.
Borchardt was right. The bust—said to depict the wife of
Akhenaten, Egypt’s Sun King—is indeed a revelation. With its strikingly vivid
colors and anatomical fidelity, the work manages to convey an aura of majesty
that contrasts with its sheer delicacy. It’s almost unbelievable that such an
exquisite masterpiece could have survived through the centuries.
Of course, if we listen to Swiss art historian Henri Stierlin, it is unbelievable.
According to Stierlin, the bust’s false reputation began
with a duped aristocratic. Sometime in 1912, the story goes, Borchardt
commissioned an artist to create a decorative piece on which to display an
ancient necklace. Wanting to experiment with ancient materials, Borchardt
ordered the bust to be painted with pigments from his archaeological archives.
(Hence the reason why it has been able to pass forensic tests.)
However, when the bust was seen by the the Prussian prince,
Johann Georg, he mistook it for a real artifact. Prince Georg was reportedly so
enamored with the work that Borchardt lacked the nerve to tell him the truth.
It wasn’t long before the deception took on a life of its own, and today, the
world reveres the bust of Nefertiti as a 3,000-year-old
treasure . . . when really it’s a 100-year-old fake. (The
bust currently resides in the Berlin Museum).
so is the bust of Nefertiti a fake? remember the opening of the post, 'You can prove a fake,
but you can’t prove originals', but in any event the article with all 10 featured works is a good read over your morning coffee.
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