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Saturday, 30 November 2013

Is it a Pollack? New York Times Journalist Patricia Cohen looks at the case between two women and a painting; a few professionals weigh in

Posted on 00:00 by Unknown
From the New York Times: Is this a Pollack?
In "A Real Pollock? On This, Art and Science Collide" by Patricia Cohen for the New York Times (Nov. 24), the argument between Jackson Pollack's widow Lee Krasner and his lover Ruth Kligman is examined in the authentication of a 'small painting with swirls and splotches of red, black, and silver'.
Until her death, in 2010, Ms. Kligman, herself an artist, insisted the painting was a love letter to her created by Pollock in the summer of 1956, just weeks before he died in a car crash. But the painting was rejected by an expert panel set up to authenticate and catalog all of Pollock’s works by a foundation established by Ms. Krasner. This month, it seemed the dispute that outlived both women might finally be settled. Ms. Kligman’s estate announced that forensic tests — comparing samples from the loafers Pollock died in, his rugs and his backyard — had linked the painting with Pollock and his home. But instead of resolving one dispute, the findings only reignited another, one that pits traditional ways of determining whether a work is genuine against newer technologies. 
On one side stands Francis V. O’Connor, a stately Old World-style connoisseur with a Vandyke beard and curled mustache, who believes erudition and a practiced eye are essential to judging authenticity. Mr. O’Connor, a co-editor of the definitive Pollock catalog and a member of the now-disbanded Pollock-Krasner Foundation authentication committee, said “Red, Black and Silver” does not look like a Pollock. “I don’t think there’s a Pollock expert in world that would look at that painting and agree it was a Pollock,” Mr. O’Connor said at a symposium this month.
On the other side is Nicholas D. K. Petraco, a retired New York City detective and forensics specialist who examined the painting at the request of the Kligman estate. Approaching the canvas board as if it were a body at a crime scene, Mr. Petraco said he had no doubt the painting was made at the Pollock house and is linked to Pollock. “I’ve had cases with less materials than this where people are spending 25 to 30 years in jail,” he said.
As technology advances, the art world has turned to microscopic analysis and pigment testing to buttress — or challenge — the judgments of a tiny club of experts whose opinions have long been treated as law. This pursuit of scientific validation has only deepened as art historians and institutions like the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, which shut down its authentication board in 1996, retreat from certifying art for fear of being sued. But science has its limits. Paint or paper may help establish the date of a work, while hair and fibers can help pinpoint where it was made. A work’s provenance must also be verified. Still, connoisseurs — as well as most auction houses who rely on them — maintain that true authorship cannot be established without an expert evaluation of the composition and individual strokes that reveal an artist’s “signature.” In this case, the difference of opinion could be worth millions. Unauthenticated, “Red, Black and Silver” would be listed as “attributed to Pollock” and carry an estimate of no more than $50,000, said Patricia G. Hambrecht, chief business development officer at Phillips auction house, where the painting is consigned. If judged a Pollock, the painting’s estimated value would soar to seven figures, she said.
Ms. Kligman’s account of the painting dates to the summer of 1956 when she was 26 and living in Pollock’s house in East Hampton, N.Y., after Krasner, having caught the lovers together, sailed for Europe. Pollock was in an alcoholic tailspin and hadn’t painted in two years. As Ms. Kligman detailed in a new introduction to the 1999 edition of her memoir, “Love Affair: A Memoir of Jackson Pollock,” the artist was on the lawn when she brought him his paint and the sticks he used. After he finished, he said, “Here’s your painting, your very own Pollock.” A friend of Ms. Kligman’s, Bette Waldo Benedict, has said Ms. Kligman told her the same story at the time.
Art forensics have primarily concentrated on what a painting is made of. But Mr. Petraco, who has decades of experience with the New York Police Department crime lab and is now a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, looked at what the painting contained: the dust, hairs, fibers or other detritus that might have fallen on the surface and under the paint. Because Mr. Petraco, who holds a Ph.D. in theoretical chemistry, has more experience analyzing red blood than red paint, he decided to perfect his technique for removing materials without damaging the painting by making some Pollock-like drip paintings in his backyard in Massapequa Park, on Long Island. (It’s tougher than it looks, he confessed.) Despite what one sees on television crime shows, hairs and threads cannot be traced to a specific individual or sweater, Mr. Petraco said. What builds a forensic case is not any single piece of evidence but a combination of consistent factors. In this case, Mr. Petraco said the clincher was discovering a polar bear hair, a rare find in a country that has banned the import of polar bear products for more than 40 years. “Is there a polar bear in this story?” Mr. Petraco wondered. There was. A polar bear rug that had adorned the living room floor in 1956 was still in the East Hampton attic.
Colette Loll, a private fraud investigator who worked on the case, said she had no preset agenda. “I was looking to poke holes,” she said but “fraud just wasn’t supported.” Both she and Mr. Petraco said they had donated their services to the estate. Ms. Loll said the case presented “a real opportunity to shift the paradigm away from the dictatorship of the connoisseur, where only one or two people who sit on their thrones can decide what is and what is not an authentic painting.
Mr. O’Connor, who is widely viewed as one of the top authorities on Pollock, said art forensics are valuable, but in this case he found the results “redundant and essentially irrelevant.” The painting may have been made in Pollock’s yard but that doesn’t mean it was made by Pollock’s hand. He did not speculate by whose hand it might have been. To Mr. O’Connor, connoisseurship is just as rigorous as forensics. Its methods, he acknowledged, “can seem mysterious, if not laughable, to the lay person.” But the connoisseur, he said, has “absorbed into visual memory the artist’s characteristic form — his shapes, compositional devices, linear rhythms, typical colors” and handling of paint well enough to detect a fake. In “Red, Black and Silver,” a silver wash covers the canvas and a black ovoid shape near the center serves as a focal point. No other Pollock has either of those characteristics, he said. In 1995, the authentication board offered to designate Ms. Kligman’s painting as a problematic work, which meant that if other scholars, with further study, labeled the work as authentic, the board would not object. But Ms. Kligman rejected that qualification. In Mr. O’Connor’s view, “the Kligman work is in limbo with respect to authenticity.” Whether it remains that way is an open question: After all, precisely what happened between two people, now dead, who were alone on a summer afternoon in an East Hampton yard 57 years ago may ultimately be beyond the ken of science or connoisseurship.
ARCAblog found three professionals on Linked In who offered opinions on this issue of connoisseurship versus forensics and the recent Pollock case.

Dr. John Daab, a Certified Fraud Examiner specializing in art and forgery research, posted the question on Linked In: "Connoisseurship v. forensics and the recent Pollock case: Isn’t time to take the mystery and politics out of authentication?" He offered this perspective here:
The recent Pollock work given a thumbs down by a so called Pollock expert was no more than a magic trick smoothed over by an assemblage of gibberish seemingly portrayed as scholarly analysis. The connoisseur expert used facts and scientific verbiage to drive his conclusions but the science (Chaos Theory) was unrelated to the subject matter and has been challenged by other scientists as bogus when related to Pollock’s works. The facts supporting the expert call consisted of a recent movie about Pollock and not a well carried out investigation based on acceptable methodologies, replicable, and verifiable by others. The connoisseur Pollock expert even got some of his facts wrong regarding forensic experts. Forensic experts are deemed expert by the Judge in a particular case, and their expertise can be jettisoned at any time during a trial via an In Limine challenge. Further, forensic graphology is not considered to be field of expertise in a court of law, whereas Questioned Document Examination and Examiners are. Yes the world of connoisseur expertise is mysterious and those of us involved in forensic examination of fine art raise the question of why now with all our advanced technology and empirical processing are we still using hocus pocus to authenticate? (The Knoedler gallery case with 60 bad calls by 20 experts demonstrates how bad the problem really is.) What seems to be happening is that the world of the connoisseurship is undergoing a paradigm shift. Just as we found that the world did not end at the horizon we are now finding that the world of connoisseurship is unraveling due to its subjective and intuitive nature. The solipsistic nature of connoisseurship coated with gobbledygook and sleight of hand magic is under siege with its cloak of scholarly analysis slowly dematerializing.
Toby Bull, Senior Inspector with the Hong Kong Police Force and Art Risk Security Consultant at TrackArt, wrote:
Good article. As a 20+ year policeman with a CID background, who holds both a Fine Arts degree & an Art Authentication (covering Forensics) qualification, I took up this very same topic when I presented a paper at The World Congress of Forensics back in 2011 titled, "Connoisseurship versus Science or Connoisseurship plus Science -- Methods in Art Authentication". My conclusion was that, generally, there is too much dismissal of the value science can bring and that it should very much be a case of science supporting the experts' eyes -- but that's just a humble copper's point of view.
It's a common-enough problem (the 'snobbery' of the connoisseur & dismissal of what scientific testing can bring to the table) , and was the case here in HK too - certainly 10+ years ago - with regard to tests on Chinese antiquities / ceramics, but slowly the positives of what - and just how easily - science can detect a fake has been gaining ground, with the best dealers now taking this on board. The number of fakes being sold are still legion, with many dealers knowingly putting fakes out there into the local market, exploiting the ignorance of the general one-off buyer. It's still a case of knowing which dealer one can trust (ones who don't knowingly peddle fakes) of whom there are some and yes, ultimately, for the collector: Caveat Emptor. TrackArt can and does operate within this minefield, with its education seminars being just one 'weapon' in its arsenal against the trade in fakes.
Dennis Baltuskonis, Owner of Art Conservation Services, responded to Dr. Daab's question:
The short answer to your question eliminate the mystery etc? Yes. But replace it with what? I propose a scoring system. E.g. Give "science" a score of 50 points. And Connoisseurs 50 points. On any single object let the experts weigh in and "score" said object. Take the average score from each side ADD them together for the final point score. Then let the buyer beware. Obviously a 100 point score "indicates" a general consensus that experts from both sides "agree/concer" and said object is "AUTHENTIC" (as most people accept that word). Like a bottle of wine rated 94 it doesn't necessarily mean that the end user will agree. Such a scoring system also leaves open the possibility that new evidence might arise which would alter the SCORE. Each "side" can create their own guidelines upon which any SCORE by any "expert" is acceptable. An independent panel might be formed to "consider" each score, etc. etc. It is possible to remove the decision from the realm of politics and special interests. This is one idea. What is yours?
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  • Moshe Rynecki
  • Mougins Museum
  • movies
  • Munich
  • murals
  • Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
  • Musée d'Orsay
  • Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza
  • museum
  • Museum Catharijneconvent
  • museum funding
  • Museum of Anthropology
  • Museum of Decorative Arts in Bergen
  • Museum of Modern Art in Sweden
  • museum security
  • museum theft
  • Museum thefts
  • Museum van Bommel van Dam
  • museums
  • music
  • Mussolini
  • Myles J. Connor
  • mythology
  • Napoli
  • Narni
  • National Etruscan Museum
  • National Gallery in Prague
  • National Museum of Scotland
  • National Museum of Serbia
  • National Stolen Art File Search
  • Nativity
  • Nazi art
  • Nazi art theft
  • Nazi-era looted art
  • negotiate
  • Neil Brodie
  • Nemetz
  • netsuke
  • new york city
  • New Zealand
  • news media
  • Nice
  • Nicolas Poussin
  • Niels Rutger
  • Noah Charney
  • North America
  • Norton Simon Museum
  • Norway
  • Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Novi Sad City Museum
  • Nuraghic bronze statuettes
  • NYC
  • NYTimes
  • Odyssey Marine
  • Okinawa
  • Olympia
  • Oplontis
  • organized crime
  • Ori Z. Soltes
  • Orpheus mosaic
  • Oskar Kokoschka
  • Oxford
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Padma Kaimal
  • painting analysis
  • Palais Fesch
  • Palermo
  • Palestine
  • Palmyra
  • Paolo Ferri
  • Parioli
  • Paris
  • partage
  • Pasadena
  • Patras
  • Paul Gauguin
  • Paul Hendry
  • Paul Rosenberg
  • Penny Jackson
  • People Not Stones
  • Permanenten Vestlandske Kunstindustrimuseum
  • Peru
  • Peter Paul Rubens
  • Peter Silverman
  • Peter Watson
  • petition
  • photographers
  • Picasso
  • pickpockets
  • Pico Iyer
  • plastic
  • Poland
  • Polaroids
  • police cooperation
  • police seizures
  • political economy
  • Pompeii
  • Port of Rotterdam
  • Porta Romana
  • Portrait of Wally
  • Post Certificate Program
  • preservation
  • press conference
  • Pretoria Art Museum
  • Princeton
  • private insurance
  • private policing
  • profilometry
  • prosecution
  • provenance
  • Provenance Research Training Program
  • psychology of forgers
  • public awareness
  • QDE process
  • Quebec
  • Quebec Art Crime team
  • Questioned Document Examination
  • Rachel Ruysch
  • Rajlich
  • Ralph Frammolino
  • Rape of Europa
  • rare maps
  • Rathkeal Rovers
  • RCMP
  • Rebecca Dreyfus
  • recovered cultural patrimony
  • Recoveries
  • recovery
  • religious art
  • Rembrandt
  • Renoir
  • renovation
  • repatriation
  • research
  • residential
  • restitution
  • Restitution Court
  • restoration
  • Reuters
  • reward
  • RFID
  • Rhino thefts
  • Richard Abath
  • Richard Ellis
  • Rick Abath
  • Rick St. Hilaire
  • Rijksmuseum
  • robbery
  • Robert Edsel
  • Robert Gentile
  • Robert Mang
  • Robert Volpe
  • Robert Wittman
  • Robin Symes
  • Rodolfo Siviero
  • Roman bronzes
  • Romania
  • Romanian Police
  • Rome
  • Rosa da Tivoli
  • Rossetti
  • roughness
  • Rudolf Leopold
  • Ruoppolo
  • Ruth Godthelp
  • S. 2212
  • Sackler Galleries of Art
  • sale of stolen paintings
  • Salvator Rosa
  • Sandy Nairne
  • Santa Monica
  • Sarajevo Haggadah
  • Sardinia
  • Sassari
  • Saving Italy
  • scandals
  • Schinousa archive
  • Scholarship - Books
  • Schoonhoven
  • Schubert at the Piano
  • Schwabing Art Fund
  • Schwabinger Kunstfund
  • Scotland
  • Scotland Yard
  • sculptor
  • Sea of Galilee
  • security
  • Security guards
  • security options
  • security specialist
  • sentencing
  • Serbia
  • Sharon Cohen Levin
  • shipwrecks
  • Sicilian Mafia
  • Sicily
  • Sisley
  • Skokloster Castle
  • smash and grab
  • smuggling
  • snuffboxes
  • sociology of crime
  • Sotheby's Auction
  • South Africa
  • South India
  • Spain
  • speaker
  • Spring 2013
  • spring/summer 2012
  • St. Patrick's Day
  • stamp theft
  • Stealing Rembrandts
  • Stefano Alessandrini
  • stele
  • Stockholm
  • stolen antiquities
  • stolen art
  • Stolen Art Bulletins
  • stolen art database
  • Stolen Art Recovered
  • Stolen Artwork Restitution Act
  • Stolen the film
  • Stonehill Art Crime Symposium
  • Stonehill college
  • street art
  • strikes
  • Stroganov Collection
  • stuart george
  • study of art crime
  • Stuttgart Fine Art and Antiquities Squad
  • summary
  • Sureté du Québec
  • surveillance video
  • Sussex Police Art and Antiques Squad
  • Sustainable Preservation Initiative
  • Sweden
  • Swedish Royal Library
  • Switzerland
  • Sydney
  • Symes
  • Symposium
  • Syria
  • ta moko
  • Takeaway Rembrandt
  • Taliban
  • Tauranga Art Gallery
  • tax fraud
  • Teddy Kollek
  • television
  • Tess Davis
  • textiles
  • Thailand
  • The Caravaggio Conspiracy
  • The Empty Frame
  • the Getty
  • the Journal of Art Crime
  • The Journal on Art Crime
  • the medici conspiracy
  • the met
  • the missing piece
  • The Monuments Men
  • The Netherlands
  • The New York Times
  • The New Yorker
  • The Palermo Nativity
  • The Rape of Europa
  • The Scream
  • The Venus Fixers
  • theft
  • Thierry Lenain
  • Thomas Kline
  • Timbuktu
  • Tom Flynn
  • Tom Keating
  • Tom Mashberg
  • Ton Cremers
  • TPC
  • Trance
  • Transnational crime
  • travel
  • treasure
  • Triamphal Quadriga
  • trickster
  • Triton Collection
  • Turkey
  • Typology of interfaces
  • U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • U.S. News
  • UBC
  • Uffizi Gallery
  • UK
  • Ulrich Boser
  • Umbrians
  • undercover agent
  • UNESCO
  • United States
  • Universal Museums
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Unlisted Conference
  • unsolved art theft
  • urgency
  • US law
  • V&A Symposium
  • Valerie Higgins
  • Van Gogh
  • Van Gogh Museum
  • Vancouver
  • vandalism
  • Veletrzni Palace
  • venice
  • Vermeer
  • vernon rapley
  • Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Victoria Reed
  • Victorian crime
  • Vienna
  • Viking artifacts
  • Villa Giulia
  • Vincent van Gogh
  • Vincenzo Peruggia
  • violin recovery
  • violin theft
  • Virginia Curry
  • Virginia Museum of Arts
  • Wales
  • Wall Street Journal
  • war booty
  • warrant
  • wartime losses
  • Washington DC
  • West Africa
  • Whicher
  • William Kingsland
  • wine fraud
  • Witches in Air
  • Worcester Art Museum
  • workshop
  • world heritage sites
  • World Press Photo Exhibit
  • World War II
  • writer in residence
  • Yale University
  • Zurich

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (295)
    • ►  December (29)
    • ▼  November (41)
      • Is it a Pollack? New York Times Journalist Patrici...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: "Europe's dirty little art...
      • LA Times: "Recovered Nazi-looted artwork to be don...
      • The Art Newspaper Quotes ARCA's Noah Charney and D...
      • Kunsthal Rotterdam Art Theft: Reuters' "Romania ha...
      • Donna Tartt's novel 'Goldfinch' endangers Carel Fa...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: De Spiegel 'Bavarian Justi...
      • Robert M. Edsel's Talk at Smithsonian National Mus...
      • WSJ: "German Museums Under Pressure to Put Collect...
      • Museum of the History of the Olympic Games: Seven ...
      • Museum van Bommel van Dam Theft: Art Investigator ...
      • Milton Esterow, Editor and Publisher of ARTnews, o...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Research aimed at differen...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Hildebrand's essay in 1955...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: De Spiegel's Ozlem Guler S...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Highlights on De Spiegel's...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: WSJ: 'Germany Plans to Pub...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection, Munich: Artworks posted on...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Who owns it and who wants it?
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: New images to be released ...
      • Art critic Alastair Sooke features V&A Art Symposi...
      • Warhol's Farrah Fawcett Portrait subject of trial ...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Paris Match Journalists Fi...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: English language media re...
      • ARCA Founder Noah Charney Publishes in The Guardia...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Germany listed 25 pieces o...
      • James "Whitey" Bulger to be Sentenced to Prison Th...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: HARP Calls on the German G...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Reuters Video: 'Cornelius ...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Images of the FOCUS Magazi...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Images of FOCUS Magazine '...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: NPR: "US Documents Raise Q...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Excerpts from the 1945 All...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Petition on Change.org to ...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection Discovery: Augsburg Press C...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: BBC Newshour Interviews Ma...
      • Kunsthaus Lempertz: The auction house used by the ...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: Granddaughter of the Paris...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection OpEd: An ad-hoc Internation...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection OpEd: Too many questions ab...
      • Gurlitt Art Collection: German magazines Focus and...
    • ►  October (17)
    • ►  September (13)
    • ►  August (47)
    • ►  July (28)
    • ►  June (16)
    • ►  May (14)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (35)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (15)
  • ►  2012 (205)
    • ►  December (8)
    • ►  November (20)
    • ►  October (36)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (19)
    • ►  July (26)
    • ►  June (19)
    • ►  May (27)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (17)
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