April 25, 2013
THEY'RE APING ACTUAL ARTISTS:
The Big Idea: Why Forgeries Are Great Art (Jonathon Keats, Apr 25, 2013, Daily Beast)
Forgers are the foremost artists of our age.I'm not talking about the objects they make. Their real art is to con us into accepting the works as authentic. They do so, inevitably, by finding our blind spots, and by exploiting our common-sense assumptions. When they're caught (if they're caught), the scandal that ensues is their accidental masterpiece. Learning that we've been defrauded makes us anxious-much more so than any painting ever could-provoking us to examine our poor judgment. This effect is inescapable, since we certainly didn't ask to be duped. A forgery is more direct, more powerful, and more universal than any legitimate artwork.Consider the work of Han van Meegeren, one of the foremost forgers of the 1930s and '40s. A leading Dutch scholar named Bredius theorized that Jan Vermeer once made religious paintings, but no one could find them. So van Meegeren produced the work that Bredius described. The fact that these paintings looked nothing like any Vermeer in existence only added to their credibility. Van Meegeren found one of the feedback loops that generate unjustified belief. We should all take heed.But isn't forgery like plagiarism?Technically speaking, it's the opposite. (Plagiarists take credit for other people's work, whereas forgers attribute their own work to others.)
It helps that they are forging painters who worked when the aim of art was beauty. Future generations of forgers will ape modern artists and their work will be, likewise, crappy.
Posted by Orrin Judd at April 25, 2013 8:24 PM
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