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In an ironic twist of fate, some master forgers are now getting respect from the art establishment they challenged and, in some cases, convulsed. London's Victoria and Albert Museum has a separate gallery devoted to first-class fakes and forgeries. Other respected museums around the world are giving the counterfeiters—long the object of public fascination—shows of their own.
In a recent exhibit of 60 imposters, the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut, included a milestone fake—Christ and His Disciples at Emmaus—sold as a genuine Johannes Vermeer (1632 – 1675) for the equivalent of $4.7 million in 1937, but later determined to be the work of Dutch forger Han van Meegeren (1889 – 1947). Doubt about its authenticity came in 1945 when van Meegeren, having been accused by the Dutch police of selling a national treasure (another Vermeer) to the Nazis, declared that the "Vermeers" were his own work. To prove this, he then painted one in front of witnesses.
A show in 2004 at Siena's Santa Maria della Scala in Italy honored gifted counterfeiters of the 19th and 20th centuries, regarded as the golden age of forgery. Those featured included Icilio Federico Joni (1866 – 1946), known as the prince of Sienese fakers. After turning out exquisite but phony Renaissance religious paintings, Joni outed himself in a 1932 autobiography, gleefully describing how he managed to fool the experts.
"The forger is generally a talented person who has not made it in his own right and avenges himself by hiding behind works of successful artists," says art historian Gianni Mazzoni of the University of Siena and the exhibit's curator. "He takes particular pleasure when art critics and experts are taken in."
The forger who most impressed Casillo was Alceo Dossena (1873 – 1937), whose works were also featured in Siena. The Italian sculptor is often described as the greatest counterfeiter of them all. Dossena rocked the art world in 1928 by revealing that he was behind some of the most prized works in prestigious collections and museums, including the Metropolitan and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. He blew the whistle on the corrupt dealers who had been selling his sculptures as the work of Donatello and other revered Renaissance artists after the merchants refused him money to bury his wife.
So, are fakes real art? Mazzoni says that for master counterfeiters like Dossena and Eric Hebborn (1934 – 1996), whose book, The Art Forger's Handbook, gives detailed instructions on creating "old masters," talent trumps forgery, making their pieces true "works of art."
Which brings us back to the Museum of Fakes. "Through the most beautiful fakes," Casillo says "we want to keep alive the memory of a history of art, which, although perverse, is often fascinating."
Dina Modianot-Fox, a regular Smithsonian.com contributor, reported this story from Salerno, Italy.


Comments
Most interesting, especially about amounts. I am not a collector but do enjoy looking at what I regard as true art. Was especially amused by the last paragraph about a collector having a picture of himself taken with an impostor of the painter!!! Will watch for more similar information.
Posted by George McDougall on May 16,2008 | 06:33PM
I am much fascinated with the fakes and forgeries, as well as the heists in the art world as featured........is their a more in-depth reading material somewhere, how these fakes and forgeries were determined to be such "individually" like, ie... Dossena's sculpture 123 is a fake because the Carbon 14 or TL (or whatever) were found to be.....(whatever), etc. TNX
Posted by Ver Asuncion on May 23,2008 | 11:44AM
I am much fascinated with the fakes and forgeries, as well as the heists in the art world as featured........is their a more in-depth reading material somewhere, how these fakes and forgeries were determined to be such "individually" like, ie... Dossena's sculpture 123 is a fake because the Carbon 14 or TL (or whatever) were found to be.....(whatever), etc. TNX
Posted by Ver Asuncion on May 23,2008 | 11:44AM
I have a painting by Alceo Dossena, and I think it's a beautiful painting even if he did forge his work.
Posted by Nadine Johnson on July 13,2008 | 12:13PM
I have a painting signed A.DOSSENA and am curious to find out who the author is. Can anyone tell me how to go about investigating this? Thank you, aps
Posted by Ana Paula Saab on August 3,2008 | 08:44AM
I also have a painting by A.Dossena I also would like to know more, is this the same Dossena as the sculpture caught for forging or another painter, I don't know wither he the forger, was also a painter? if you have any info would you please pass it along, contact me at logan@bellnet.ca and attach a pic of the painting thanks in advance Mike
Posted by Mike Logan on August 6,2008 | 05:32AM
I have a painting signed S. Donatello (Simone Donatello). I have an MFA degree in art and art history, so I know something of art. I am an artist and an expert in restoration of old paintings and have spent a great deal of my life doing just that. I do believe that this painting is an original. It was brought to the states (back in the 1800's) by an Italian family that lived in Pisa, IT. I would like to know if this is truly and original.
Posted by Regie Kennedy on September 8,2008 | 06:46AM