Italian Art Mystery Unveiled by Perspective Experts

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  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2023
  • Philip Mould and Fiona Bruce investigate a highly desirable Venetian view. The painting was inherited by owner Nick Hopkinson from his great grandfather Meyer Spielman, but there's a mystery about it that he would love to solve. Could this be a work by one of the Italian masters - either Francesco Guardi or Michele Marieschi?
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    #Painting #Art #History

Komentáře • 247

  • @amethystmistarts5532
    @amethystmistarts5532 Před rokem +37

    I think Nick saying the painting is more important to him as a lovely reminder of a childhood... is priceless.

    • @rebeccatapley3739
      @rebeccatapley3739 Před 3 měsíci

      If it had been worth half a million pounds, the family might have *had* to sell it. The cost of insuring a painting like that is way too high for most people to pay - they'd have money but not the painting they love.

  • @jeffpetrie7744
    @jeffpetrie7744 Před rokem +193

    This show is ridiculously fabulous! Thank you so much for posting to CZcams!

  • @thegreenquill1052
    @thegreenquill1052 Před rokem +66

    Nick said at the beginning that if it were up to him, he'd keep it in the family. I'm happy for him that (presumably) he got to. And the provenance will make for an even more interesting family story. I love your show!

    • @Bethgael
      @Bethgael Před rokem +7

      I was thinking the same thing. He loves the painting and now, presumably, won't have to deal with outside pressures to sell it.
      I'm with him. Whomever painted it (English or no) did a lovely job, and I agree about that figure in the front. As a writer, I'm rather taken by the fact that there was a painter so skilled they thought to throw a Firenzi stamp on it. It tickles the imagination!

  • @julianmonti4260
    @julianmonti4260 Před rokem +38

    Wow! Very British style detective story. Very professional, full of details and never boring. So nice to hear when British people pronounce correctly Italian names.
    At the end, Mr Hopkins looks to be almost relieved by learning that the painting is not that highly valuable. So, he can keep it within his family as a heirloom dear to his heart.

    • @deacy_6218
      @deacy_6218 Před 7 měsíci

      i like fiona bruce a lot, i really respect an English woman who keeps her boots on in bed

  • @lindsayaliciawilcox2440
    @lindsayaliciawilcox2440 Před rokem +58

    This result is obviously so satisfying for the owner. He gets to keep and enjoy a painting he truly loves without the burden of family members bugging him to sell it because it is disgustingly valuable. He certainly looked ‘tickled pink’ at the result to me. 🎉🎉❤

    • @mon_avis2978
      @mon_avis2978 Před rokem +11

      He was remarkably gracious about accepting the result. British upper-class manners, something I admire.

    • @jksmith818
      @jksmith818 Před 9 měsíci +1

      So, what Englishman painted this beautiful painting? I would love to know this bit of information .

    • @tds7745
      @tds7745 Před 9 měsíci

    • @RichieRich1234RICH
      @RichieRich1234RICH Před 9 měsíci

      Jings I’m sure if it was worth 10m he’d have had no problem selling and taking his share. The irony that the ancestors bought it as one thing then tried to present it as another then generations later get caught up exposing an even bigger fraud is not lost. If he’d not got Fake or Fortune in he could have possibly flogged it for 1/2m. Greed ruins everything.

    • @pdruiz2005
      @pdruiz2005 Před měsícem

      An anonymous forger working in London before 1808, clearly. I wish they had carbon-dated the wax on the Florence seal. Then we would’ve found if it was English wax or Tuscan wax that was used, as well as the year it was produced.

  • @chattykathie7129
    @chattykathie7129 Před rokem +48

    This series is like Agatha Christy’s mystery of the art world, except no murders, except of the art owners dreams. 😉

  • @_wesleyhome_
    @_wesleyhome_ Před rokem +24

    This is the one and only show that never disappoints, regardless of the outcome of the painting.

  • @MrKajithecat
    @MrKajithecat Před rokem +19

    Nick seems like a down to earth guy who's enjoying the ride and really enjoyed it. The experience enriches the painting.

  • @pistaarany9792
    @pistaarany9792 Před rokem +19

    Beyond grateful that a show like this exists.
    😍

  • @jennywilloughby3236
    @jennywilloughby3236 Před rokem +10

    New favourite show to binge on. Fantastic presenters.

  • @user-ru3ql6ji4p
    @user-ru3ql6ji4p Před rokem +18

    Look at the bright side. Now his brother won't ask him to sell it.

  • @69JonnyP
    @69JonnyP Před rokem +13

    I JUST LOVE THIS SHOW, thanks for posting, thanks for making it for so long. What a beautiful painting and what amazing artists the 2 front runners are. Only 12mins in so outcome unknown and going from history could be a fake or fortune. But it’s a wonderful piece no matter what.

  • @ellenmadsen7308
    @ellenmadsen7308 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I like that this expert is willing to give his opinion directly and answer questions.

  • @dragonreader3817
    @dragonreader3817 Před rokem +6

    I’m not an art person, but I really enjoy this show. It’s also educating me on art, so I appreciate the mystery and the art lesson. Thanks.

  • @arbiehill68
    @arbiehill68 Před rokem +7

    Great show! I do miss Dr. Bendor very much!

  • @suehorn4182
    @suehorn4182 Před rokem +6

    Very good episode. All the twists and turns. Our loving ancestors were human

  • @a.westenholz4032
    @a.westenholz4032 Před rokem +9

    Great episode, though IDK about the final conclusion about it being a British artist. The reasoning seemed somewhat implausible. To assume that someone would go to the lengths of faking a little known detail of a magisterial stamp of FLORENCE (note not Venice) on what was supposed to be a common souvenir knock off, not a major artist, just seems unlikely. You would assume that IF they could fake little details like the seal so well, then whoever painted that painting would know enough to get not only the methods but Venice right.
    Second, artist of that period who did "views" often took artistic liberties (I think we were even shown some), changing buildings' proportions slightly or their positions to get a nicer composition. Some painters were more faithful to reality, and some were more willing to be a bit "creative" with some details, but only to the degree that it still remained utterly recognizable as a whole. However, taking artistic license can mean that once in while that which is painted, while visually lovely, no longer makes complete architectural sense. As to the canvas, the artist could be reusing an old canvas of better weave, scraped clean, which may account for the unusual paint layers.
    So, IDK, but I would not want to disregard that seal, and on such flimsy evidence assume that the painting was British. By all indications it was painted by some unknown Italian artist, probably of the school of Marieschi, who might have lived in Venice for a time, but later returned/moved to Florence. The painting could even have been painted at a later date in the artist's life, when they were painting the scene more from memory and habit.

    • @SchlichteToven
      @SchlichteToven Před rokem +2

      Re your first point, it wouldn't have had to be the original artist who put the seal on - someone who wanted to sell it later could have done it. They might have known it wasn't a genuine painting by Marieschi, and tried to redirect attention based on an Italian place name. That it was Firenze instead of Venezia might not be such a big deal because the seal was for a court in Firenze that dealt with the possessions of bankrupt families - it wasn't the seal of an original seller. I'm not sure if the purview of a Florence court would extend to Venice, but there's also probably less of a chance that someone who'd bought a painting OF Venice would be living IN Venice. Though it's always possible the painting was by an English person who sold it to an English person who then went abroad to live in Florence, or something of that kind.
      A lame pun about this painting just came to my mind: the painting is Marie-ESQUE.

    • @a.westenholz4032
      @a.westenholz4032 Před rokem +2

      @@SchlichteToven The problem is the timing, assuming the seal is genuine. The painting is undoubtedly done in the Marieschi style, so either has to be by someone who worked with him or someone trying to copy him. Marieschi had a rather short but very productive life until 1744, where he worked with a host of other artists to produce his scenes of Venice. Some of them could easily have kept going after his death. Or some other local artist could be copying his work for sale. But it has to end up in Florence in a bankruptcy court before 1808. That's at most 60 years. That's not really enough time to assume it went abroad and back again without some paper trail indicating the fact. So more logical to assume that the painting was either painted in Venice and bought by someone who lived in Florence, or painted in Florence and sold there- sometime in 1750-60, and later to go into a bankruptcy auction at the end of the 1700s.

  • @debbiew.7716
    @debbiew.7716 Před rokem +18

    It is good that the history has been clarified. It is still a beautiful painting with a fascinating story, I am amazed that someone with so much talent was making these views like postcards. It is still a treasure!

    • @Songbirdstress
      @Songbirdstress Před rokem +1

      I want to know who painted it, I'm sure they could find out as he was very good.

    • @lisap9936
      @lisap9936 Před rokem

      Some fakers have enormous talent!!!

    • @parthsavyasachi9348
      @parthsavyasachi9348 Před rokem

      Because its not the painting that fetches the money its the name. The painting is every bit excellent but one name would make it into millions and another into few thousands.

    • @anitasmith7764
      @anitasmith7764 Před 10 měsíci

      I can’t understand why someone wouldn’t sign their paintings.

    • @dragonwitch27
      @dragonwitch27 Před 10 měsíci

      Copy and fake are not synonymous. In fact, it was quite common in past centuries for works to be copied by other artists. The painter never signed it as Marieschi, someone assumed it was one.

  • @carlotta4th
    @carlotta4th Před rokem +4

    Oh that is a beautiful painting! I'm so glad he doesn't feel obligated to sell it, it's gorgeous.

  • @tytn9978
    @tytn9978 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This series has become my new favourite mystery series. It helps that I have stood on the sidewalk across from this site and so remember it well! A thing of Beauty often has no price!

  • @MsSarah32503
    @MsSarah32503 Před rokem +4

    When I was taught Venetian painting technique at University we were taught to put a layer of vermillion red over the gesso layer (white). Some things make you go hummm...

  • @philmorton4590
    @philmorton4590 Před 9 měsíci +3

    The wax mark gets us back to 1808, forging that would be extremely difficult. But alot of paintings were made for tourists, I find it hard to believe to do them in time you'd use vermilion underneath, it slows the construction time. Also the dark quality of the building lowers acceptance of potential buyers. Still alot of questions!

  • @joethomas2354
    @joethomas2354 Před rokem +26

    I wouldn't be so certain this was British. It could certainly have been created in Florence by an artist unfamiliar with Venetian architecture; that could account for the discrepancies the expert notes, and would not require the outlandish theory that the red stamp was some kind of effort to forge an Italian identity.

    • @christianfrommuslim
      @christianfrommuslim Před rokem +1

      Good idea

    • @andreaandrea6716
      @andreaandrea6716 Před rokem

      But the canvas under the microscope? ("More like English canvases in structure. Looser weave.") And then, the paint? I know that I was thinking "So what?" But then, schools dictate certain orders for colours. (One learnt methods and stuck to them).

  • @francoisederocher
    @francoisederocher Před rokem +3

    These programs are so addictive! Thank you!

  • @raniapretorius139
    @raniapretorius139 Před rokem +7

    Thanks for posting this episode …one I haven’t seen before … keep it up 😁

    • @lisap9936
      @lisap9936 Před rokem +1

      Yes PLEASE keep it up !!!

  • @Drew_Snydermann
    @Drew_Snydermann Před rokem +3

    Yeah, might want to check granddad's desk drawer for that wax seal stamp.

  • @katehobbs2008
    @katehobbs2008 Před rokem +4

    This just exposes the silliness of art pricing. “We love the picture but it is worth 20 times as much depending on which we’ll-known artist created it”. The picture doesn’t change. It is so shallow, not about the quality of the art AT ALL. Blaargh.

    • @docinparadise
      @docinparadise Před 8 měsíci

      I’ve always hated that. Just because an artist got lucky enough to get noticed (or maybe get a rich patron) all their works, no matter how good or bad they are, are worth 100x-1000x the value of a superior artist’s who never got his/her lucky break.
      But then I’m not an art snob…as they say “I just know what I like”😜

  • @talanigreywolf7110
    @talanigreywolf7110 Před rokem +13

    I mean, after all is said and done, it IS a beautiful painting!

    • @Songbirdstress
      @Songbirdstress Před rokem +1

      Sometimes, when it's beautiful, it not being expensive is a blessing. There was an episode where they needed to sell the painting because they had lost their father, but the painting was so at home in their house, it was a shame.
      Ha, did some genealogy and it turned out the stories (which I only half believed) were true. Family histories can be surprising...

    • @andreaandrea6716
      @andreaandrea6716 Před rokem

      Definitely!

  • @katharinatrub1338
    @katharinatrub1338 Před 9 měsíci

    " If anything it is more Beautiful Now, than it was' said Nick Hopkins. Very special way of putting the Blow he just received, but oh so Wise and Resilient!

  • @ReynaSingh
    @ReynaSingh Před rokem +10

    Great channel. Keep it up

  • @brahmburgers
    @brahmburgers Před rokem +5

    As usual, another very good show. Thanks. I enjoyed every moment.

  • @eucitizen78
    @eucitizen78 Před rokem +2

    Exciting like a thriller 😃👍

  • @Schlei602
    @Schlei602 Před rokem +2

    A good one again. Thanks so much.

  • @beverlykerr6590
    @beverlykerr6590 Před 4 měsíci

    What a gracious man Nick is. One can only wish him many more years of enjoying his painting and that whoever looks after it after him will enjoy it as much and have as many happy memories.

    • @akschmidt2085
      @akschmidt2085 Před 4 měsíci

      Right? He was so horrified discovering that the family lore wasnt true I felt really bad for him. He seems like a sweet man

  • @chrisreynolds3351
    @chrisreynolds3351 Před rokem +7

    We´re not experts, just art lovers, but to us it was obvious from the first look that this painting was not a ´masterpiece.´ Our disagreement with the original opinions made it all the more exciting to watch. This is an excellent show and the presenters are perfect in this role.

    • @Songbirdstress
      @Songbirdstress Před rokem

      I don't know if Phillip chooses the paintings, but whoever does so is a master themselves. Subjects are fascinating from every point of view.

    • @lisap9936
      @lisap9936 Před rokem +3

      I totally agree with you Chris Reynolds. At first glance l felt that the scene lacked real perspective. That the basilique came too far forward, and lacked the subtle mystery that one finds in, for example, Canaletto’s work, where the sense of space is immense. ( Just one aspect of what l felt upon seeing the painting for the first time) . This may sound arrogant, sorry. Although l am a ( pro.) painter , l cannot pretend to be an expert either. I know a lot about technique, but usually go by gut feeling. Nevertheless, l recognise that whoever painted this work, was a fairly accomplished technicien!

    • @chrisreynolds3351
      @chrisreynolds3351 Před rokem +1

      @@lisap9936 I really appreciate your assessment of the work too. It´s lovely to read a response from someone who is an art lover too. Especially of the Renaissance period. Our favourite Venetian artists is Canaletto. We were lucky to spend two holidays of two weeks just in Venice. It was impossible to take in all the culture, famous works of art and ancient architecture in one fortnight. Each day, after 3 or 4 hours we had to come away and slum it in the towns an on beaches because we went into cultural burnout! We did the Doge´s palace in 4 separate visits!
      I would love to hear your views on the Mona Lisa. I still maintain that this was NOT painted by Da Vinci but by a much loved student perhaps. Hence it being found on his bedroom wall after his death.
      Also have you seen the Gent Altar Piece? Breathtaking.

    • @Ursaminor31
      @Ursaminor31 Před rokem +1

      Totally agree the composition on initial view was not refined, great work but not refined

  • @susanwoodcarver
    @susanwoodcarver Před rokem +1

    Always delightful! Thank you

  • @layalabi1667
    @layalabi1667 Před rokem +1

    Absolutely brilliant!! Thank you!!

  • @Brutally-Honest
    @Brutally-Honest Před 3 měsíci

    Such a truly enjoyable mystery. Love these FAKE OR FORTUNE videos. Luv em.

  • @sandydimond3363
    @sandydimond3363 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting painting, history and the research in this documentary. Thank you for sharing

  • @michaelmottlau5941
    @michaelmottlau5941 Před rokem +13

    I highly appreciate the professional and very well done work of the production team. Very skilled video-photography with high end cameras and lens equipment,, and wonderful crips and clean audio-recordings. I wonder what kind of microphones and technique they used? The post editing and music chosen supplements the dramatic and faschinating story and history of this beautiful and creative 1700s painting- It¨s a pure pleasure to listen to Fiona Bruce and Philip Mould, who express themselves in a expressive and sophisticated language. Thank you for this captivating episode. Kind regards from Copenhagen, Denmark.

    • @davidtydeman1434
      @davidtydeman1434 Před rokem +1

      Michael this show was made by the BBC which is why the production quality is so high

  • @suebethiantexas2475
    @suebethiantexas2475 Před rokem

    I am so excited about these art exploration shows. I have learned a lot

  • @CSLewisHadItRight
    @CSLewisHadItRight Před rokem +1

    I absolutely love this show! I am hooked on it like a fine piece of art hanging on a wall. I binge watch this show.

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Před rokem +1

    Very Instructive, Bravo !

  • @valerielester7210
    @valerielester7210 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I would never get to see this show if it wasn't on you tube, thank you so much from someone who watches very little television because most of it is not fit for human consumption.

  • @fyutffdtuibgfetu
    @fyutffdtuibgfetu Před rokem +7

    Who would fake an unknown at the time artist? It makes no sense at all. I think this is a genuine Marieschi who made a bunch of identical paintings because they were selling well.

    • @andreaandrea6716
      @andreaandrea6716 Před rokem +1

      But they WERE known. That was the problem. They were the rock stars of their time. (Think Coco Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, Tom Ford, etc. and knockoffs).

  • @allenpinker9829
    @allenpinker9829 Před 11 měsíci

    Fascinating show!Mystery...love it!

  • @andandocommauromotozono5202

    The best painting owner i ever seen. Hugs from Brazil !

  • @debbiewedoe2564
    @debbiewedoe2564 Před 8 měsíci

    Intriguing story filled with many twists and turns. Fun adventure and the painting is beautiful. 🌞

  • @conscience-commenter
    @conscience-commenter Před rokem +7

    Whomever painted it did a beautiful job except for the building mistaken for two and the italian wax seal . I feel this was a reproduction for the tourist trade done by an accomplished artist to rival Marieschi's version for less money . There are many instances all over the world of artist and craftsman creating similar products exclusively for tourists because of the bigger net and easier sale . The color foundation is also similar albeit out of order but shows how the unknown artist wanted the ground layers to resemble Marieschi's . However you analyze it, the technique of a vanishing point reflects on Brunelleschi"s Baptistery painting c 1420.

    • @Songbirdstress
      @Songbirdstress Před rokem

      The cupola is wrong too. Currently it looks like it's zinc, not something you get in the UK and therefore something a Brit wouldn't understand (I had a friend staying and I lived on the top floor in Paris, and he looked out and said "What's that grey stuff? It was just the roofs opposite...). It looks like the guy was used to Wren buildings, the scene could be London with water.

  • @Norfolk250
    @Norfolk250 Před rokem +1

    That new camera-technique is fanTAStic!

  • @alexrichardson9125
    @alexrichardson9125 Před rokem

    Thoroughly interesting. Thank you.

  • @Crackle-Crackle
    @Crackle-Crackle Před rokem +12

    The owner of the painting took the news extremely well.

  • @micheledix2616
    @micheledix2616 Před rokem

    Just love this show. Even love the repeats

  • @geraniaceae4470
    @geraniaceae4470 Před rokem

    I am so hooked on this show!

  • @avrilbethwaite2349
    @avrilbethwaite2349 Před rokem

    Love this show, so exciting

  • @stefanomarzari4388
    @stefanomarzari4388 Před rokem +1

    The basilica of Santa Maria della Salute Is not by Vincenzo Scamozzi, how it is said, but by the most important Venetian baroque architect, Baldassarre Longhena.

  • @ksbrook1430
    @ksbrook1430 Před rokem +2

    One of the more intriguing episodes.

  • @bewareofpigeons
    @bewareofpigeons Před rokem

    The appalled expression on the face of the marble bust behind the authority on Marieschi in the last minutes of the programme is priceless....

  • @Celtopia
    @Celtopia Před 2 měsíci

    To me,.... It's almost superfluous as to where or by whom it was painted ...it's beautiful,...and masterly done,... Thus there is it's value.

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps Před rokem

    Probably the best art show on the planet!

  • @stephenfularz7573
    @stephenfularz7573 Před rokem +1

    I love this show.

  • @ericschmidt5712
    @ericschmidt5712 Před 10 měsíci +1

    it is a lovely painting and not the result 'hoped for' but they still get it far back with quite a story and an interesting story thats not a 100% figured out but almost more intriguing because its more mysterious

  • @davidsmith3736
    @davidsmith3736 Před 9 měsíci

    I like that judge,straight up.

  • @jukes243
    @jukes243 Před rokem

    Nick gets to keep his painting. How marvelous. I too, think it's beautiful. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. If it's beautiful (to you) then it's valuable.

  • @TheTubeTube2
    @TheTubeTube2 Před rokem +1

    I agree with many others that Mr Hopkins was in several ways relieved by the result and that it throws light on his family as well as the painting - by Major Gubbins? What a terrific piece of investigation by our two principal sleuths as well as the technical wizards and what a valuable piece of provenience to go with the picture. He should stick a
    Vintage Cannelloni label on the frame.

  • @totipark54
    @totipark54 Před rokem

    love this show!:::)

  • @vincenthaegebaert1854
    @vincenthaegebaert1854 Před 8 měsíci

    But in the end, look at what an amazing story this painting now has.

  • @Indiana82
    @Indiana82 Před 9 měsíci

    I love how the x-ray gun actually looks like a x-ray gun. No need saying that I want one. Fabolous Show btw.!

  • @rtd1791
    @rtd1791 Před rokem +1

    It was so thoughtful for all of these historic painters to create jobs for art lovers in the 21st century. 😅

  • @Ki_Thi
    @Ki_Thi Před rokem +4

    You got to give it to the Brits, they are the best television makers in the world

  • @barbhulme
    @barbhulme Před rokem +2

    So, Meyer spielman purchased the painting to mark the 25th wedding anniversary. Nick is loosey goosey with dates, but does mention 1882 in re the wedding. 1882 - 1907 = 25.

  • @conscience-commenter
    @conscience-commenter Před 2 měsíci

    Upon further examination of this episode, I believe this painting should be attributed to Marieschi because of the following features : identical canvas size , identical vanishing point , identical angle pov , identical placement of figures in foreground, identical sizing of buildings . Look at the side by side screen shot @23:27. They are identical except for color and figure placement . Marieschi could have had apprentices do some work creating slight variations in iteration .

  • @carolinekofahl8867
    @carolinekofahl8867 Před rokem +1

    I guess it happens in all families that two stories get mixed up to appear as one 🤔😊💐

  • @m.y.l.1313
    @m.y.l.1313 Před 3 měsíci

    I'm hook, watched it once and now I can't stop. I don't know what it is about it that captivate me so much.
    J'imagine que c'est sain, intelligent, captivant, intriguant et up lifting.

  • @lynettefaithfull9444
    @lynettefaithfull9444 Před 3 měsíci

    It's stilla beautifull painting to have in the family

  • @lisap9936
    @lisap9936 Před rokem +1

    I love your fake or fortune videos. How l wish there were more! But it seems the series stopped a while ago. Or has it???

  • @portialancaster3442
    @portialancaster3442 Před rokem +4

    I think you missed a clue. Why does an English painting appear in the archives of a Florence probate magisterium sometime before 1808? A search of the archives for a deceased Brit might be fruitful. It's also intriguing to think about a young British artist painting it during his Grand Tour. Perhaps he went on to be famous in England?
    Love this show and all your previous one.

    • @Bigwave2003
      @Bigwave2003 Před rokem

      39:10 It's never said that the painting does appear in the archives of Florence. An example is given, but we're told it would take years to conduct such a search. 4:37 The red seal appears on a bracing board of the frame, not on the canvas itself. Perhaps a re-used bit of wood or frame (honest explanation) or an attempt at forgery?

    • @shinichigojir12
      @shinichigojir12 Před rokem

      It never said it was in Florence archived. They didn’t search it. But I wish they discussed more on possibility of forging the stamp. Is that something common or easy to do, and compare the stamps’s fonts with other genuine stamps.

  • @Rhombohedral
    @Rhombohedral Před rokem +2

    So the good news is, the painting wont need to be sold and can remain in the family. And one can enjoy it as one had enjoyed it before

  • @kevinchambers1101
    @kevinchambers1101 Před rokem +2

    This was the best of the series, so far. For me the family history is more important than who painted it.

  • @totw7790
    @totw7790 Před rokem

    Great film

  • @suegreene1
    @suegreene1 Před rokem +2

    Why Bellotto never appeared as a suspect?

  • @larryzink8978
    @larryzink8978 Před rokem +1

    Isnt it odd that they never mentioned that Canaletto worked in England for a time?

  • @emmahardesty4330
    @emmahardesty4330 Před rokem +5

    Hmm. The imitator's version is more appealing than The Real Thing: the Fitzwilliiam painting less charming and rigid compared with Nick's painting. I think other applications of vermillion by Marieschi should have been examined. At any rate..the .art world is rather nutty.

    • @lorie76yt
      @lorie76yt Před rokem

      @Emma Hardesty It is a little nutty - but I love it! :D and I have to agree, I prefer Nick’s copy to the original Marieschi 🤷🏻‍♀️👍🏻

  • @tonylarussa4046
    @tonylarussa4046 Před rokem +1

    La Salute was designed and built by Baldassare Longhena not Scamozzi.

  • @sharonpeek4578
    @sharonpeek4578 Před rokem +1

    I thought the wax seal was the seal of a magistrate; perhaps the painter took it to Venice and bribed a magistrate to stamp it? Was the entire stamp forged? How did they match the exact texture and color of the wax? I have questions.

    • @bewareofpigeons
      @bewareofpigeons Před rokem +1

      that would be material for what the Italians call 'un giallo' and very exciting...!

  • @ianakiinkiow4303
    @ianakiinkiow4303 Před rokem

    So sad! I thought it was the real thing!!! Well it still looks amazing!

  • @captaindan151
    @captaindan151 Před rokem

    49:35 how he tries to expand the picture. lol

  • @bullseyecanada
    @bullseyecanada Před rokem +1

    The Italian seal is confirmation of it being SOLD in Italy as part of a property sale as the expert told them. It's very likely the British painter found a way of selling the painting in Italy to an unsuspecting buyer initially.

  • @doppel5627
    @doppel5627 Před rokem +3

    The.supposedly forged stamp does not make sense. One would expect Venetian, not Florentine stamp. Another thing: isn't it weird that Christies' sell forgeries and that the National Gallery exhibited it as Marieschi?

    • @JosephSchmidtfan
      @JosephSchmidtfan Před rokem

      Try Googling "Christies" and "forgery". You may find the results interesting.

    • @alexsilva-vn7jc
      @alexsilva-vn7jc Před rokem

      It is weird! Also found it strange that the (brother)Jacomo Marieschi name was quickly brushed aside as a mistake! Rather a big mistake to make imo.

  • @CallieMasters5000
    @CallieMasters5000 Před rokem +1

    Admit it: your heart skips a beat when you hear that woman say "At 42 million..." in her distinctive accent. 😁

    • @bewareofpigeons
      @bewareofpigeons Před rokem

      followed by the man with the twist of the nose....😀

  • @tallthinwavy3
    @tallthinwavy3 Před rokem

    Just like Art Detectives

  • @pdruiz2005
    @pdruiz2005 Před měsícem

    At 41:23. Now time to carbon-date the wax of the Florence seal for traces of carbon-14. That’ll give you a nice, precise year in which the wax was produced, so a ballpark figure of when the painting was sold in the Florentine auction. It could go back further than 1808.

  • @mikef.1000
    @mikef.1000 Před 8 měsíci

    Great episode.
    That Florentine seal should be investigate further, IMO. Are there other suspect versions of this type of wax seal around the place?
    Finally, I'm always intrigued by the uniquely British slant of, "What's it worth?" Whatever the Brits may think about the aesthetics of something, it always seems to get trumped by the mighty GBP!

  • @TheJoya1234
    @TheJoya1234 Před rokem

    Oh dear. How surprising.

  • @anitasmith7764
    @anitasmith7764 Před 10 měsíci

    I don’t love that the only Guardi painting they showed was no real comparison at all to this painting. Like not even close. Surely he painted better more elaborate pictures than that

  • @classicalaid1
    @classicalaid1 Před rokem +1

    Nick Hopkinson looks like a handsome Charleton Heston double (the epic film The Ted Commandments). Now that would be a more interesting topic of discussion than the hopelessly third rate Venetian scene being studied here.

  • @davidsmith3736
    @davidsmith3736 Před 9 měsíci

    I would be gutted.Damn.😢

  • @damianousley8833
    @damianousley8833 Před rokem

    The travel postcards were a bit on the large hefty side in those days. Photographic postcards undermined the copy studios in Venice and left them colourising photographs of the landscapes and buildings. A lot cheaper to lug home.

  • @user-ry7we3yx6r
    @user-ry7we3yx6r Před 5 měsíci

    Wow

  • @AFAskygoddess
    @AFAskygoddess Před rokem +8

    Its a shame that, had it not been for desire to sell it, the painting would have been viewed as a priceless masterpiece for many more generations in Nick's family.
    Now it's looked at as an attractive copy/forgery, and Nick sees his grandfather with new and more cynical eyes. Sometimes things are better left untouched.

    • @P.Galore
      @P.Galore Před rokem +1

      Curiosity Killed The Cat.....

    • @Songbirdstress
      @Songbirdstress Před rokem

      Not necessarily, the story could have been Major Gubbins', and the Grandfather paid top dollar, so he believed it.

    • @AFAskygoddess
      @AFAskygoddess Před rokem

      @Songbirdstress The grandfather told the family that he bought the painting while touring Venice. He lied.

    • @adriel7540
      @adriel7540 Před rokem +1

      Do you believe fiction and misinformation are more important than the truth?

    • @edithengel2284
      @edithengel2284 Před rokem

      @@AFAskygoddess We don't know that; we only know it was a family story. We don't know how it originated or who originated it.