Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil (Banks of the Seine at Argenteuil) is an oil painting by an unknown artist. The painting is a landscape depicting the River Seine at Argenteuil in France. It is owned by Englishman David Joel.
Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil | |
---|---|
Artist | Unknown |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Owner | David Joel |
In 2011 Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil was featured on the British TV programme Fake or Fortune?, in a failed attempt to establish it as an authentic painting by Claude Monet.
Fake or Fortune? investigation
editHistory
editThe title Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil along with the date, 1875, appears on the frame, and there is a painted signature purportedly of Claude Monet.[1]
The painting was sold by Georges Petit in 1918 to the Khalil Palace in Cairo, where it stayed until 1953.[1]
The painting was acquired by art historian David Joel in 1992 for £40,000.[1] The painting had previously been offered for sale at auction, but failed to reach its £500,000 reserve.[1] The painting was included by the Artizon Museum (then the Bridgestone Museum of Art) in "Monet: a Retrospective" in 1994.[2][verification needed]
For a number of years after he purchased it, Joel attempted to establish it as an authentic Monet.
Investigation
editJournalist Fiona Bruce and art dealer and historian Philip Mould investigated the painting in the first episode of the first series of the TV programme Fake or Fortune?, first aired on 19 June 2011.[1][3] The widely accepted authority on Monet's work is the catalogue raisonné published by the Wildenstein Institute in Paris. One challenge Bruce and Mould faced was that the Wildenstein Institute had already examined the painting once, after the death of Daniel Wildenstein, not accepting it as genuine.[1]
The programme had the picture scanned, the paints analysed, and the brushwork and signature examined by experts. The programme argued that the painting was genuine, an opinion shared by a number of experts.[1] However the Wildenstein Institute did not accept their arguments, and maintains that the painting is a fake, based predominantly on the connoisseurship of the late Daniel Wildenstein.[1][4]
The Institute has since been provided with further evidence suggesting the painting is genuine, but the Wildenstein Institute has not changed its verdict and the painting remains excluded from its catalogue raisonné. Prominent art experts Joachim Pissarro, Charles Stuckey and Richard Brettell reject the painting’s authenticity.[5]
Joel went to court in 2014 to force the Wildenstein Institute to include the work. He lost the case, appealed, and received a final verdict the courts would not intervene in December 2015.[5]
Similar works
editMonet did paint a number of scenes in the Argenteuil area. An acknowledged work with the same title was painted by Monet in 1872. This work was sold at a Sotheby's auction in New York for $4.8 million in 2005.[6]
Businessman Ralph Wilson acquired a Monet painting with the title La Seine a Argenteuil in 1997 from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Wilson held the painting until his death in 2014, at which point it was put up for auction with an estimated value of between $12 million and $17 million.[7]
See also
edit- List of paintings by Claude Monet
- The Seine at Argenteuil, 1873 by Monet
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h "Monet". Fake or Fortune?. Episode 1. 19 June 2011. BBC. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
- ^ Monet: a retrospective; 11 February-7 April, 1994, Bridgestone Museum of Art; 16 April-12 June, 1994, Nagoya City Art Museum; 18 June-31 July, 1994, Hiroshima Museum of Art. Paul Hayes Tucker, Burijisuton Bijutsukan, Nagoya-shi Bijutsukan, and Hiroshima Bijutsukan. Nagoya Chunichi Shimbun, 1994. OCLC 30368644
- ^ Freeman, Len (19 June 2011). "BBC programme preview". BBC. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
- ^ TV and Radio (19 June 2011). "Telegraph programme review". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
- ^ a b "French owner loses case in Monet attribution claim". 8 January 2016.
- ^ "Auction report". Nysun.com. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
- ^ Wawrow, John (5 June 2014). Bills owner's estate auctioning off art collection. Associated Press. Retrieved 5 June 2014.