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Subject:Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Ian Dubin Sat, Oct 21, 2017 IP: 42.2.219.172 Hi there folks |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Bill H Sun, Oct 22, 2017 Both plaques bear the title of "Baizitu" (100 Children Picture), and the enlarged inscription has a cyclical date of "Wuchen" (1928), along with attribution of "Done by Wang Dafan while at a Zhushan (Jingdezhen) guest house." |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Ian Dubin Tue, Oct 24, 2017 Bill |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Ian Dubin Tue, Oct 24, 2017 Hi Bill |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Ian Dubin Wed, Oct 25, 2017 Just for interest, here is a link to a document I created showing the hammer prices of all of Wang Dafan's work as recorded on Artnet.com |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Ian Dubin Mon, Oct 30, 2017 How the hell can a forger come up with something like this? |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: Bill H Wed, Nov 01, 2017 In my opinion, your forger still needs to return to the easel for more practice emulating the master. As a Qianjiang-school artist, Wang Dafan was bringing scroll-painting techniques to porcelain surfaces. Hard to believe the individual who panted your plaques ever learned to paint a beard with a brush having only one bristle. Here's more proof of Wang's pudding. |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: rat Tue, Oct 31, 2017 Believe it or not, it's not that hard, especially when you can hire an existing ceramic painter to do the work. Painters in China have been trained from time immemorial by copying noteworthy paintings. A fair number of early paintings are thought to survive only as close copies, initially made specifically to preserve copies of much-loved works for posterity. The closest examples we have of the famous calligrapher Wang Xizhi's work, for example, exist in the form of Tang dynasty tracing copies. Painters who later became known for their own works are known to have started out painting works in the style of better known painters who employed them to do so because they could not keep up with demand. Luo Ping for example is known to have worked for Jin Nong, painting plum blossoms in Jin's style. |
Subject:Re: Enamel on ceramic paintings - is forgery common??
Posted By: rat Tue, Oct 31, 2017 Thanks for posting this information, it is an excellent reference. |
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