Thursday, 8 January 2015
Alfred Stevens
While browsing auctions, I (too) often come across works by or attributed to Alfred Stevens. Stevens is a wonderful artist, with a very precise, detailed style, vibrant colours, a perfect symbol of the high society of the late 19th century. Some of his works fetch up to $1 million, making him interesting to fakers, either creating new works or taking copies or similar works and adding a signature. The number of works appearing on the market, and the wildly varying quality, make this obvious.
The above work is an example, and far from the most egregious. At Bill Hood & Sons Auctions you can now buy "Le Salon du Peintre", attributed to Stevens, for an estimated $3,000 to $6,000. May be worth it, that's personal taste, but if you want the real deal, you should search for the below version in the Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Brussels. Comparing the two, I wouldn't dare to attribute the above version to Stevens and would call it a 20th-century copy of the work. The colours, the detailing (the floor!), the way the man on the left is painted... don't fit with Stevens or the period at all. It's not that painters don't paint different versions of the same work (they do) or don't make preparatory works, but this is just too inferior and different. UPDATE: didn't sell, luckily...
Labels:
Alfred Stevens,
Bill Hood,
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