Giovanni Bastianini
{{short description|Italian artist (1830-1868)}}
File: Michele gordigiani, ritratto dello scultore giovanni bastianin.jpg ]]
Giovanni Bastianini (17 September 1830 – 29 June 1868) was an Italian sculptor who began his career as a stonecutter in the quarries at Fiesole, and was sent by Francesco Inghirami to study in Florence, first with Pio Fedi and then with Girolamo Torrini, with whom he collaborated on a statue of Donatello for the portico of the Uffizi. Bastianini's name became famous in connection with his unmasking as the first widely publicized art forger.{{Cite book |last=Helstosky |first=Carol |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j5jsEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA20 |title=Italian Forgers: The Art Market and the Weight of the Past in Modern Italy |date=2024-05-15 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-1-5017-7459-1 |page=20 |language=en}}
Life and career
Bastianini admired Renaissance sculpture, which became his main inspiration. From 1848 to 1866 he was under contract to the Florentine antique dealer, Giovanni Freppa, who supplied him with casts and models as well as a stipend, in exchange for which Bastianini produced numerous neo-Renaissance works, especially busts and bas-reliefs in the style of Donatello, Verrocchio, Mino da Fiesole and other Italian Old Masters, most of which were sold at modest prices.
File: Giovanni bastianini, pescatorello 02.jpg
In the early 1860s Freppa and Bastianini grew more ambitious. Following the success of Bastianini's bust of Savonarola, carefully coloured and aged by the sculptor Francesco Gaiarini Brunori, Dionisio. Giovanni Bastianini e Paolo Ricci, scultori fiesolani. Firenze: Tipografia Domenicana, 1906, p. 15, note 3. and placed in Inghirami's Florentine villa, where it was "discovered" by the eminent Florentine art dealer Capponi and bought for the nation, Bastianini crafted a portrait bust of the poet Girolamo Benivieni, which Freppa commissioned; exhibited to great acclaim in Paris as "school of Verrocchio", it was purchased by comte de Nieuwerkerke for the Louvre at auction for fr 13,600.
None of the pieces had been suspected of being inauthentic, and the deception was eventually revealed by Freppa, who resented not receiving his agreed-upon percentage of the exaggerated price paid by the Louvre Museum. The Paris press made hay."Article after article was printed in the leading journals of Paris, denouncing 'the well-known impostor and forger Bastianini' with all that vituperative eloquence in which our neighbours so highly excel." ("The City of Lilies", Temple Bar, 37, 1873:478.
Many of the owners of Bastianini's pastiches stood by the artistic value of the works. Giovanni Costa, who had contributed to the funding of the Savonarola purchase, allowed that he was glad to hear the artist was living.Mark Jones, Fake?: the art of deception British Museum, 1990:197.
Having purchased as genuine works Bastianini forgeries,Mark Jones, Fake?: the art of deception British Museum, 1990:196, a bas-relief of the Madonna and Child, a pastiche of Antonio Rossellino (for the Virgin) and Desiderio da Settignano (for the Child). in 1864 the Victoria and Albert Museum in London knowingly bought a sculpture by Bastianini, as an example of modern work inspired by the best of the past; it is exhibited with other works by Bastianini formerly thought genuine. Bastianini's tin-glazed terracotta Portrait of a Lady in the Della Robbia technique, authenticated by Bernard Berenson as a "15th century Della Robbia bust of Marietta Strozzi" found its way through Joseph Duveen to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston.David Sox, Unmasking the Forger: the Dossena deception, 2008:130f.
See also
Notes
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{Cite journal |last=Helstosky |first=Carol |year=2009 |title=Giovanni Bastianini, Art Forgery, and the Market in Nineteenth-Century Italy |journal=The Journal of Modern History |volume=81 |issue=4 |pages=793–823 |doi=10.1086/605486 |s2cid=146297018 }}.
- {{cite journal|last=Moskowitz|first=Anita F.|title=The Case of Giovanni Bastianini: A Fair and Balanced View|journal=Artibus et Historiae|year=2004|volume= 25| issue = 50|pages=157–185|doi=10.2307/1483793|jstor=1483793}}
- {{cite journal|last=Moskowitz|first=Anita F.|title=The Case of Giovanni Bastianni-II: A Hung Jury?|journal=Artibus et Historiae|year=2006|volume= 27| issue = 54|pages=201–217|doi=10.2307/20067129|jstor=20067129}}
- Moskowitz, Anita F. "Forging authenticity -- Giovanni Bastianini and the Neo-Renaissance in Nineteenth-Century Florence" {{ISBN|978 88 222 6171 7}}
- Tina Öcal: Shape-shifters of Transculturation: Giovanni Bastianini’s Forgeries as Embodiment of an Aesthetic Patriotism, in: Faking, Forging, Counterfeiting. Discredited Practices at the Margins of Mimesis, ed. by Becker, Daniel / Fischer, Annalisa / Schmitz, Yola, Bielefeld 2018, pp. 111–126.
External links
- {{Internet Archive author |sname=Giovanni Bastianini}}
- {{cite web
| title = Bastianini, Giovanni
| work = Artists' Biographies
| publisher = Artnet
| url = http://www.artnet.com/library/00/0068/T006804.asp
| accessdate = 2007-07-25 }}
- {{cite web
|title = FORGERIES, A LONG HISTORY
|publisher = Museum Security
|url = http://www.museum-security.org/forgeries.htm
|accessdate = 2007-07-25
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070804234511/http://www.museum-security.org/forgeries.htm
|archivedate = 2007-08-04
}}
- {{cite web
| title = Notes on Imitation and Forgery
| url=http://www.umich.edu/~engtt516/forgery.html
| accessdate = 2007-07-25 }}
- {{Cite news
| last=Glueck
| first=Grace
| title=They Are Inauthentic, Yes, but Beautiful
| newspaper=New York Times
| date=May 18, 2007
| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/18/arts/18forg.html?ex=1337140800&en=17d24295afc3fb5d&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink
}}
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Category:19th-century Italian sculptors