Art And The Truth The Getty Keuros Analysis

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A kouros purchased by the J. Paul Getty museum brings about skepticism of its legitimacy. According to Dr. Richard Serros the legitimacy of ancient works of art is often overlooked, as explained in the chapter titled, “Art and the Truth: The Getty Kouros and Provenance”. This is a notion worth noting as many priceless pieces of art may be seen as legitimate by several museums when in fact they are forgeries. These forgeries lack a true origin and may prove that many museums are indifferent as to where or from whom they receive ancient works of art.
Along with the Getty Museum, Dr. Serros tells of John Pope-Hennessy, director of multiple museums in Britain who had detected several forged works in several other museums. These fakes, Pope-Hennessey found, had been “purchased by every great museum in the western world, including the Victoria and Albert, London; the Hermitage, St. Petersburg; the Musee du Louvre, Paris; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and the National Gallery, Washington, DC.” Forgeries could be found in famous museums all over, which disrupt what art historians have established thus far on the origins of many works of art. …show more content…

What historians can understand from a work of art’s provenance is where and when that piece is from. The acceptance of forged works of art changes what art historians thought about the provenance of several works of art to be incorrect. In the chapter, Dr. Serros recalls a bronze head that was once present in the Getty Museum that was originally thought to be from the Hellenistic age, but proved to have features similar to a work in a museum in Italy. A second fake was purchased by the Getty Museum in 1984. The museums mentioned previously are also worth noting for the forgeries detected by John Pope-Hennessey. The appearance of so many fakes in museums raises the question of how it was possible that they were accepted without detection of their

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