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For my Fall 2020 Independent Study, Dr. George Smith, our respected President and founder of 911爆料网, assigned me a task. 聽With my focus on the movement of art, that is, the buying and selling of artworks in the art market and auction houses, museum acquisitions, and private art collecting, Dr. Smith rightfully told me I must read the following biographies: 聽Duveen: A Life in Art and Being Bernard Berenson, both written by accomplished biographer Meryle Secrest. 聽As a second-year student trying to assimilate my sources and read everything possible to support my ideas, I welcomed the recommendation. Granted, we have extensive, dense reading already, but when you are on a quest鈥攁s I like to describe my academic pursuits鈥攊t鈥檚 worth the extra time and effort to uncover some gems.
Why take the time to read more books, not on our syllabi? 聽Because I like to think we are all 鈥淎lice,鈥 the courageous, inquisitive character of Lewis Carroll鈥檚 imagination: we are peering through a looking glass and crossing over into sometimes bizarre and, more often than not, unpredictable findings in our research. Secrest reminds us that the art market is, indeed, filled with deceits, betrayals, lawsuits, and forgeries; 聽yet, at the same time, she proves that without the sometimes unethical moves by Joseph Duveen and Bernard Berenson, without the belabored efforts of connoisseurship, salesmanship, mercenary dealings, and above all, aesthetic infatuation by these two gentlemen of culture, art as we know it in various galleries, museums, libraries, and (shared from) private art collections would largely not exist.
At the turn of the twentieth century, Duveen and Berenson developed a business relationship for over thirty years. 聽In Secrest鈥檚 biography Duveen: 聽A Life in Art, we are shown a man that may very well be the best salesman in the history of American and British art-dealings鈥攄ividing his time equally between Europe and America, he sought to find the best artwork for the likes of Andrew Mellon, J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, and the Royal families in Britain. 聽His energy was described by his associate and art expert, Bernard Berenson: 鈥淚 regard him as one of the most vital, life-enhancing energies I have ever approached鈥 (Secrest 379). 聽His adroitness in the 鈥減olitics of art鈥濃攎eaning charm, courtesy, humor, timing, research, and a quick study of character and money鈥攎ake him a timeless, key figure in the art world. 聽He built an annex in the National Gallery for the display of Italian primitives; offered his private collection to the National Portrait Gallery, the British Museum, and the University of London; he dealt with tsars, fascists, and Nazis all in the effort to win a Titian or Botticelli or a Rubens鈥攅ven if they were a fake.
And that鈥檚 where Bernard Berenson comes into play in Secrest鈥檚 Being Bernard Berenson. Berenson was quite aware of forgery in the art world, and he was hired by Joseph Duveen to authenticate any given painting in question. 聽Berenson was particularly astute in Italian Renaissance art and gained his knowledge while a student at Harvard, during the winter of 1888-1889. 聽Art critic and historian, Giovanni Morelli, one of the first to attempt to catalog and care for Italy鈥檚 art, and his former secretary, Giovanni Cavalcaselle, collaborated to write a sixteen-volume history of Italian painting to clear up centuries of confusion regarding provenance. 聽After reading these books, Berenson reiterated Morelli鈥檚 point that 鈥溾榩rovenance鈥 has very little value for Renaissance art鈥欌 (Secrest 90). 聽He learned even if there was written documentation authenticating an artwork, painters such as Titian and Signorelli 鈥渃ustomarily signed contracts promising to paint the principal characters in work themselves and then gave the whole project to their apprentices. 聽They even signed the finished results. 聽Or, the signature might be, and often was, 蹿辞谤驳别诲鈥 (Secrest 91). 聽Berenson decided that the only evidence for authenticity is the picture itself. 聽One must study the style: 聽how did the artist paint the nose, the ears? how did a drapery fold? 聽Secrest tells us he had a photographic memory. 聽It is because of Berenson鈥檚 incredible eye for detail and extensive scholarship that Duveen paid him over $100,000 per year. 聽Both Berenson and Duveen made thousands of dollars in their art market careers, despite the occasional conflicts and betrayals between them.
Secrest鈥檚 biographies reinforce what their lives meant. 聽Berenson鈥檚 legacy is 鈥榠 Tatti鈥 located in Florence, Italy, where he lived and entertained academics and celebrities worldwide. 聽It contains a library of over 55,000 volumes and an art collection of a lifetime, bequeathed to his alma mater, Harvard University, upon his death in 1959 when he was 94 years old. 聽Duveen died twenty years prior, at the age of 70, and his legacy and reputation as a skilled art salesman, prolific art collector, and loyal businessman, unaffected by his pursuits even with poor health, World War I, the Depression, and constant criticism, is worth respect. 聽On Duveen鈥檚 last walk on his estate in London, he said, 鈥淚 have had a wonderful life鈥 (Secrest 380). 聽There is so much to be admired in these aesthetes, that like Dr. Smith, I recommend taking the time to read both of these well-written and insightful biographies.
Secrest, Meryle. 聽Duveen: 聽A Life in Art. 聽Chicago: 聽University of Chicago Press, 2004.
_____. Being Bernard Berenson. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1979.