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The Protagonist posted:yeah it's just a real cool room, anything could be on those panels goatse chapel
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 08:12 |
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# ? May 3, 2024 10:13 |
this series looks cool, i'm gonna try track it down! e: here's the christoph waltz ep https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2P3VwqnjWY there's a netflix doco on beltracci too (Beltracchi: The Art of Forgery). tbh i'm not so much a fan of him, seems like a prick lol. exmarx has issued a correction as of 10:13 on Jun 6, 2021 |
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 10:06 |
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exmarx posted:there's a netflix doco on beltracci too (Beltracchi: The Art of Forgery). tbh i'm not so much a fan of him, seems like a prick lol. Yeah from Scammer 2.0 documentary he seemed to have a sky high ego that got worse after getting all the limelight due to getting charged and arrested in Germany. Not to mention the real reason why he was caught was he kept pressing his luck by cranking out a high volume of paintings to support his lavish lifestyle. Eventually the odds and shear volume of paintings meant that eventually one gallery curator started asking questions about the paintings. Also when he went off to do original works they got panned and his lawyers even prevented pictures of them being shared.
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 13:30 |
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Ok here's the thing: I watched the documentary in the OP, the one about the big forgery discovery at the major art dealer. And I see those rothkos and I'm like, yeah loving anybody can forge that poo poo. There was a scene in a court of law where the art people were arguing whether the fake was upside down or not. And I cannot express how irrationally angry it made me.
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 14:04 |
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I'm glad that the chad pei-shen quian was able to escape to China instead of dealing with the US legal system. Also seeing the types of people who drive this "commodity" bubble it's hard to feel sorry when they got taken for a ride.
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 14:38 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbfx6wbznzE
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# ? Jun 6, 2021 15:13 |
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lol https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SUms6RVYV98
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# ? Jun 9, 2021 12:24 |
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ItS nOt A fOrGeRy ItS aN oRiGiNaL
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# ? Jun 9, 2021 15:14 |
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very angry i watched a question that doesn't get answered in the video.
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# ? Jun 9, 2021 15:20 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KA5Kr1qhSyg
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# ? Jun 9, 2021 15:22 |
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Filthy Hans posted:https://www.thecollector.com/vantablack-anish-kapoor-stuart-semple-controversy/ he also made a black called black 2.0. i had a tube of it, it was pretty black
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# ? Jun 11, 2021 08:28 |
good thread: https://twitter.com/artcrimeprof/status/1404444172849881101
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# ? Jun 26, 2021 07:00 |
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The romans fuckin’ looooved to put dicks on everything. Sometimes the dicks themselves have dicks
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# ? Jun 26, 2021 09:29 |
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dudes rock
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# ? Jun 26, 2021 09:31 |
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my favorite art piece at the local musem that is sadly not on display anymore maybe fits this thread: The Only Known Grave of a Glassblower the same artist did lots of pieces with extensively forged provenance, though i dont think he ever took the extra step to try and pass anything off as truly legit. more like an artistic tall tale
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# ? Jun 26, 2021 09:47 |
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Great idea for a thread! Forgery adds the spice of mystery and controversy to art and livens up any artist's record. My forger of the day is Zhang Daqian, who had a backstory most GMs would turn down and an S-tier beard. That scholarly affectation with the flowing beard and flowing robes helped him build an almost cultic sense of myth around himself, so you might be wise to take his backstory with a pinch of salt here and there: Sichuan, 1899: a painter, heavily pregnant, dreams of a white-bearded man giving her a black gibbon. She gives birth to Zhang Zhengquan the next day. This is an ink-blooded family - her older son Zhang Shanzi's tiger paintings will be famous in their own right. She teaches the kid to paint from a young age and by the age of 12 he was getting commissions to paint fortune-telling cards. Now at 17, he was at boarding school in Chongqing but didn't have the money to get home. While making the 120-mile trek home with a few friends he was abducted by bandits and told to write his own ransom note. His calligraphy convinced the bandits' leader to make him his secretary and Zhang proceeded to spend the next three months slinging that impeccable brushwork, robbing houses, studying poetry from looted books and practicing copying stolen paintings until the group were busted by police. Somehow his family talked him out of this situation and sent him and his brother over to study shibori in Kyoto a couple of years later, separating Zhang from his fiancée Xie who died soon after. After attending her funeral Zhang decided to step back from the world - probably to avoid an arranged marriage rather than any sudden religious conviction - and become a Buddhist monk, taking the new name Daqian. His reclusion didn't last as his Roman Catholic family sent his brother - who had joined a republican precursor to the Kuomintang while in Japan - to drag him away, but it added the touch of classical flair which Zhang would play to his advantage for the rest of his life. From there Zhang went to Shanghai to take instruction in traditional painting and had the chance to study the work of old masters in close detail. He became obsessed with mastering the styles of great artists such as Shitao and would copy their paintings over and over. The accidental bandit became, by his account, an accidental forger as connoisseurs simply refused to see his copies as anything but the real thing. Zhang began to amass a huge collection of seals of authentication, faking them if necessary. His success as an artist and con artist took him to Beijing where he fell in with Pu Xinyu, an artist who happened to be related to two (2) emperors and was able to supply Zhang with colophons to mark his fakes as genuine. Zhang would read up on the descriptions of lost paintings and then forge them on antique silk, age them with tea and a hairdryer and apply one of his dubious seals. Through all this Zhang was becoming a prodigious polygamist with a crowd of hangers-on and a pet gibbon (prophetic dream remember, he was a gibbon reincarnated) and constantly producing paintings at an industrial rate, averaging maybe 500 a year. His style became more and more varied, blending elements from different masters and creating something strangely original. He left China as the CCP closed in on victory and began to drift around the world from Sao Paulo to Nice building pavilions and bamboo gardens and his myth as the last great intellectual of classical China without ever learning a Western language. Having injured his eyes in an accident he added an impressionistic flourish of splashed-colour to his repertoire, enlivening his style even further. Zhang kept painting up to his death at the age of 83. He was decadent and brilliant, some kind of agent of chaos. Paintings attributed to him routinely sell for millions to art-as-investment psychos while curators are warned to be mindful that any given classic that resurfaces might be one of his forgeries. Now of course the circle of grift is complete - the forger has become the forged, and that eclectic style makes the forgeries hard to pick from both directions. You can only imagine him being happy with that.
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# ? Jun 29, 2021 02:47 |
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that rules, thanks for that story.
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# ? Jun 29, 2021 13:02 |
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That guy led the best possible life.
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# ? Jun 29, 2021 16:09 |
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crepeface posted:that rules, thanks for that story.
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# ? Jun 29, 2021 16:14 |
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My pleasure i can’t say how much of the story is true, but that’s the whole point of Zhang Daqian, and why art forgery is good
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# ? Jun 29, 2021 19:07 |
zhang daqian ftw Xiao Yuan: Librarian at Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts replaced stolen works with own replicas - and amassed £3.5m in the process When Xiao Yuan took over as chief librarian at the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts he spotted a potentially lucrative sideline. In what was described as a “phenomenally extreme act of fakery” he began stealing and selling masterpieces, replacing them with his own replicas. Xiao is reported to have admitted removed 143 paintings from a gallery under his care between 2004 and 2006, successfully auctioning 125 of them until 2011. By swapping the landscapes and calligraphies of 17th and 20th-century Chinese artists with his own replicas, Mr Xiao amassed 34 million yuan (£3.5m) which he spent on apartments and more paintings. The 57-year-old Chinese librarian said in court that he spotted fake paintings in his first day on the job and had noticed more fakes replacing his own as time went on. “I realised someone else had replaced my paintings with their own because I could clearly discern that their works were terribly bad,” said Mr Xiao in the two-hour hearing to Guangzhou People’s Intermediate Court. Although he pleaded guilty to corruption, Xiao said in his defence that forgery was rampant and students and professors could take out paintings in the same way they could borrow books. Phillip Mould, an art dealer, said there was more risk involved in trying to replicate older grandmasters than modern prints. “This is quite a high-wire act,” said Mr Mould, who presents the BBC’s art investigation programme Fake or Fortune? He added: “It is highly unlikely this would [happen] in national institutions under the scrutiny of Western art critics. It would be ludicrous.” The paintings were Chinese rather than Western ones which handlers might otherwise have been less familiar with, Mr Mould said. Artists whose works were stolen included the influential 20th-century artists Qi Baishi, who used watercolours, and Zhang Daqian – himself a master forger – who depicted landscapes and lotuses. Also listed on the court transcript was Rock and Birds by Zhu Da, a 17th-century painter and calligrapher who used ink monochrome.
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# ? Jul 4, 2021 07:18 |
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Zeroisanumber posted:That guy led the best possible life. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chang_Dai-chien What a story. He also utilized the strategy of forging lost paintings as way to step around the classic forgery challenge of how to creating a compelling Provence for the paintings.
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# ? Jul 4, 2021 14:36 |
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christmas boots posted:I feel like Rothko works really live or die in the presentation. I mean all art does but I think it's especially true for him. the only way i could respect art like that is if whenever a painting was sold or moved it was burned and the janitor had to paint a new one fine art is only fine because rich people are obsessed with being able to own and put a price to the original. imo the louvre should convert all their paintings to jpgs
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# ? Jul 4, 2021 17:55 |
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Mercrom posted:imo the louvre should convert all their paintings to jpgs what about sculptures? huh??!?
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# ? Jul 4, 2021 18:48 |
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The Nastier Nate posted:what about sculptures? huh??!? the louvre minecraft server
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# ? Jul 4, 2021 18:53 |
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Dreylad posted:friend who worked at an art gallery told me early on that art was just a massive money laundering scheme. bitcoin got nothing on Art. if they're not using it to launder it, they're using it to shelter it, the value of art is all subjective so it's a good way to store vast sums of money in investments that you can chronically undervalue despite knowing they will appreciate the people who buy it have absurd amounts of it and while they may enjoy the art immensely, enjoyment is generally the least important part of the equation. a lot of art never gets taken out of the box it was shipped in. i worked for a midstream oil and gas company for a number of years and our CEO was a fine art collector, he filled three office buildings and who knows how many private residences with his personal collection and we were still tripping over crated paintings all the loving time. Mirthless has issued a correction as of 19:59 on Jul 4, 2021 |
# ? Jul 4, 2021 19:53 |
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Mirthless posted:if they're not using it to launder it, they're using it to shelter it, the value of art is all subjective so it's a good way to store vast sums of money in investments that you can chronically undervalue despite knowing they will appreciate you shoulda taken one home not like he’s gonna miss it
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# ? Jul 5, 2021 03:12 |
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I'm watching Netflix's Made You Look right now and it's the most fun I've had in a while Just all these dipshit rich folks getting taken for a ride I loving love it Pure comedy
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# ? Jul 18, 2021 16:41 |
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That MH Miller fucker from the NYT was the most obnoxious person in the documentary. Just top to bottom smugness Ann Freedman INNOCENT! Pei Shen is praxis gradenko_2000 has issued a correction as of 17:36 on Jul 18, 2021 |
# ? Jul 18, 2021 17:33 |
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gradenko_2000 posted:I'm watching Netflix's Made You Look right now and it's the most fun I've had in a while It was a feel good film to me especially after the film interviews all the various horrible hedge fund / rich yuppie couples who got taken for a ride with the art forgeries.
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# ? Jul 18, 2021 17:34 |
gradenko_2000 posted:That MH Miller fucker from the NYT was the most obnoxious person in the documentary. Just top to bottom smugness matty glesias's Art Twin
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# ? Jul 19, 2021 07:05 |
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Zeroisanumber posted:fool themselves into thinking that the fake wine is the best thing they've ever tasted. There's a good chance it is.
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# ? Sep 12, 2021 07:30 |
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gradenko_2000 posted:That MH Miller fucker from the NYT was the most obnoxious person in the documentary. Just top to bottom smugness Pei Shen was just playing a prank. If it was on YouTube he'd have gotten millions of views.
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# ? Sep 12, 2021 23:24 |
https://twitter.com/diffendale/status/1439204731403055114 thread about boar forgery (no pun)
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 08:00 |
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Boar Vessel is innocent
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 12:25 |
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# ? May 3, 2024 10:13 |
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baw posted:goatse chapel The art of Kirk Johnson is almost impossible to forge.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 22:39 |