| THE MAN WHO MADE VERMEERS: UNVARNISHING THE LEGEND OF MASTER FORGER HAN VAN MEEGEREN -Jonathan Lopez |
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| Written by Meghan Masterson | |
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Author: Jonathan
Lopez
Publisher:
Harcourt Books
Year:
# of Pages:
340
ISBN:
978-0-15-101341-8
Reviewed
By: Meghan Masterson (
Jonathan Lopez’s
book about a successful forger of many paintings, including some that were done
in the style of the lauded 17th century painter Vermeer, is
fascinating and informative. Aside from telling the never-dull story of Han Van
Meegeren, a man who made a fortune with his paintbrush and a talent for swindling,
The Man Who Made Vermeers brings to
life the world of art, including its dark underbelly. As this book
demonstrates, forgeries were far more common than you might think during the
1920s and 1930s.
Lopez’s love of
art is admirably shown throughout the book, and his descriptions of specific
paintings are vivid enough that the reader feels that he or she has viewed the
textured paint strokes in reality. His occasionally wry comments about the
weaker aspects of some paintings, including a few of Van Meegeren’s, are also
entertaining and, based on my untrained viewing of the helpful photographs
throughout the book, right on the mark. Lopez’ compliments to other paintings
are also well-deserved, again including some of Van Meegeren’s—though he
painted mostly forgeries, he was undeniably skilled.
The Man Who Made Vermeers was clearly researched in great
detail, as the large number of endnotes and bibliographical notes will attest.
The facts are precise, conclusions well-drawn, and the complex network of the illicit
sale of paintings is explained. This book is also important because it is
dedicated to telling a truthful tale of Van Meegeren. As Lopez asserts, the
artist, who was exposed as a forger after the Second World War, was a fraud in
more ways than one; he persuasively portrayed himself as a wronged man, a
struggling artist whose work was constantly and maliciously critiqued until the
only way he felt he could perfect his technique and connect with the great
artists he admired was to imitate their distinctive styles. Van Meegeren became
a kind of heroic figure, one who fooled those experts who disparaged his work. He
was also applauded for his role as a trickster after he sold one of his
forgeries to Hermann Goering. That Van Meegeren appears to have been a Nazi sympathizer
was largely ignored, and Lopez offers evidence to show that the forger did not
gleefully dupe the Nazis; rather, he simply made his income from selling forged
paintings wherever he could.
The book also unlocks
the world of the German occupation of
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