ChatterBank4 mins ago
Fake or Fortune series.
7 Answers
Did anyone see the programme "Fake or Fortune" last Sunday?
So much evidence was thrown up to suggest the landsape painting the owner possessed was in fact a Monet, but the Wildenstein Institute that is responsible for the Monet collection thought otherwise, and in my mind the institute came across as a little offhanded and arrogant at best.
Do you believe it was a Monet??
So much evidence was thrown up to suggest the landsape painting the owner possessed was in fact a Monet, but the Wildenstein Institute that is responsible for the Monet collection thought otherwise, and in my mind the institute came across as a little offhanded and arrogant at best.
Do you believe it was a Monet??
Answers
Yes I did & can't believe that no-one has told the Wildensteins where to go & what to do when they get there!
Just tell all the Monet collectors where you'll be setting up a private auction & watch the money roll in. What can they do to stop it?
20:17 Sat 25th Jun 2011
I don't think the Monet collectors would touch it with a bargepole after the Wildenstein's pronouncement. Have you ever seen such sheer arrogance in proclaiming that their judgement was not based on the evidence, but on their own ''connoisseur-ship''. I.e. If we don't think it's a Monet, then it can't be. I reckon they are just too full of their own self-importance to admit that Wildenstein senior was wrong when he made the original declaration that it wasn't by Monet.
It's "The Emperor's New Clothes" - everyone's afraid of being the first to question the mighty House of Wildenstein! Gather all the other experts, have them issue a statement that Wildenstein is naked & see what happens to the supercilious morons then...
... If nothing's achieved, it'd still be fun!
... If nothing's achieved, it'd still be fun!
auctioning won't do you much good; collectors are unlikely going to risk millions of dollars (the difference between a real Monet and a fake) on something that an accepted authority says is a fake. Even if they're wrong you'd have trouble selling it on; you'd be betting they'd change their minds, and they mightn't.
It didn't look that much like other Monets I've seen, and for all I know it could well be a forgery. But the evidence in favour of it being real seemed pretty persuasive.
Prof House had a letter in the paper yesterday
http://www.guardian.c...24/monet-in-the-frame
It didn't look that much like other Monets I've seen, and for all I know it could well be a forgery. But the evidence in favour of it being real seemed pretty persuasive.
Prof House had a letter in the paper yesterday
http://www.guardian.c...24/monet-in-the-frame
It's snobs like these Wildenstein's that say that Vettriano isn't an artist and that his paintings are of no artistic value. I love Vettriano's paintings - and that is what counts.
I didn't see the programme but the experts were asked only for their opinion of the painting - that is all it should have - an opinion not a condemnation.
Are they related to Jocelyn Wildenstein?
I didn't see the programme but the experts were asked only for their opinion of the painting - that is all it should have - an opinion not a condemnation.
Are they related to Jocelyn Wildenstein?
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.